Why describing DNA as “software” doesn’t really work 

Check out Science Uprising 3. In contemporary culture, we are asked to believe – in an impressive break with observed reality – that the code of life wrote itself: … mainstream studies are funded, some perhaps with tax money, on why so many people don’t “believe in” evolution

Source: Why describing DNA as “software” doesn’t really work | Uncommon Descent

Ancient DNA sheds light on Arctic hunter-gatherer migration to North America around 5,000 years ago — ScienceDaily

An ancient population of Arctic hunter-gatherers, known as Paleo-Eskimos, made a significant genetic contribution to populations living in Arctic North America today, new research shows.

Source: Ancient DNA sheds light on Arctic hunter-gatherer migration to North America around 5,000 years ago — ScienceDaily

Ancient DNA tells the story of the first herders and farmers in east Africa — ScienceDaily

A collaborative study led by archaeologists, geneticists and museum curators is providing answers to previously unsolved questions about life in sub-Saharan Africa thousands of years ago.

Source: Ancient DNA tells the story of the first herders and farmers in east Africa — ScienceDaily

At Mind Matters: Could DNA be hacked, like software?  

It’s already been done. As a language, DNA can carry malicious messages: People often say that our genome is like a language. For example, a recent science paper explains that “genomes appear similar to natural language texts, and protein domains can be treated as analogs of words.”

Source: At Mind Matters: Could DNA be hacked, like software? | Uncommon Descent

A complex network of genes helps plants cope with DNA damage | Uncommon Descent

And, we are told, it all just happens, even though nature shows no evidence of design and evolution is random, not governed by laws … Note that they don’t even try to describe it without resorting to little human figures.

Source: A complex network of genes helps plants cope with DNA damage | Uncommon Descent