I haven't trolled the rest of the media stories but the Everett Herald got the scanner angle into one of their stories.
http://heraldnet.com/article/20091216/NEWS01/712169860 The reporter told me that when she asked about these issues, they refused to comment on them so she wrote ~
"But while short, the three-hour flight was busy. The pilots eliminated risk factors early with tests that determined “everything was functioning.” They tested some of the airplane’s systems while on-board equipment recorded and transmitted data to a flight-test team at Boeing Field.
“There were no surprises,” Neville said. “The airplane did exactly as we were expecting.”
But not everything went off without a hitch. Monroe-resident Dennis Eckert was listening to a scanner monitoring the Boeing radio frequency during the flight and reported that the pilots had to put an anti-icing system into manual mode at one point.
He added that early in the flight, radio conversations revealed Neville had to reset the circuit breakers after a cone didn’t automatically deploy behind the aircraft. Cones are generally used for monitoring airspeed, and can be deployed manually.