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Science

The Fruit Fly Drosophila Gets a New Name 136

G3ckoG33k writes "The name of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster will change to Sophophora melangaster. The reason is that scientists have by now discovered some 2,000 species of the genus and it is becoming unmanageably large. Unfortunately, the 'type species' (the reference point of the genus), Drosophila funebris, is rather unrelated to the D. melanogaster, and ends up in a distant part of the relationship tree. However, geneticists have, according to Google Scholar, more than 300,000 scientific articles describing innumerable aspects of the species, and will have to learn the new name as well as remember the old. As expected, the name change has created an emotional (and practical) stir all over media. While name changes are frequent in science, as they describe new knowledge about relationships between species, these changes rarely hit economically relevant species, and when they do, people get upset."
The Media

BBC Brings DRM-Free Content To Linux Users 131

eldavojohn writes "The BBC is planning to release some of its programmes to users of GNU & Linux. You won't see Doctor Who or Dragons' Den on there anytime soon, but they have been working with Canonical & Collabora on getting this out there for Totem users. The developer blog mentions that the sheer number of options in the open source world actually makes this difficult to accomplish."

Comment Re:Well, there's one solution to all this ... (Score 1) 270

I don't think an open source requirement should be there, and I don't think the defense has any right to the source code for the device either. The lack/availability of software does nothing to ensure a device is functioning as intended. A device is more than just the soft/firmware. What if any of the thousands of integrated circuit elements is failing? What if power levels are just squeaking by and logic operations being to fail? What if the device has been physically damaged, and part of the device doesn't function properly? There are countless variables that can make a device fail, and software is just one.

This is why we have analytical science, which has existed since long before firmware, software, or computers in general. Analytical devices are calibrated, and are supposed to be tested/validated regularly. The presence/absence of software means nothing in the end: whether you know the code or not, the device must be calibrated and then validated against a specification. If the the defense is not satisfied with the police's book keeping with regards to standards/certification, or if they wish to challenge the standards/cert itself, then by all means argue in court.

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