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So I am currently restructuring my companies security policy and trying to get Open PGP as a central point in all this.

Any input on how others have structured their trust network inn a corperate setting.. How do you verify which keys are employees and what roles (such as deploying software) people have?

I have my own idea as to how im going to structure this but I'd love to hear other peoples thoughts first

Interestingly the influx of new users from twitter has increased since Musk's announcement rather than dying down... Apparently Musk isnt doing much to help his reputation.

QOTO User Count  
17,795 accounts +6 in the last hour +99 in the last day +310 in the last week

Reportedly 80% of ukrainians living in kyiv are without water supply [t.me/babel/23938]

@OnNegation Not exactly my expertise, but I always enjoy a good deep conversation. I am certainly down. As an expert in ML it does have some relationship to my expertise though I suppose.

Anyway, its great to have you here and look forward to chatting sometime!

@bjorn

Just personal experience. Vast majority of pros seem to use git command line and not through a gui. They use github of course, but only as the server repository not to replace the command line. I dont think ive ever seen a pro actually edit or modify their git repo through the github web IDE thing.

@patricia@mastodon.social

@wwydmanski Great to have you here. I am a ML expert myself (and founder of the instance)... we have quite a few of those around. Looking forward to getting to know you.

Hi all!

I'm a PhD candidate doing research into ML for biotechnology. In my free time, I'm also a cofounder of a startup making tools for real estate analysis.
Don't expect any startup threads from me, though, I'm more into science than business!

My ML research is focusing on few shot tabular learning, and applying them in my biotech life.
The latter focuses on metagenomics.

@hadriscus For leisure yes.. despite the name "Technical Diving" it is still non-commercial in nature. Some people might use it for research or something, but for the most part its leisure diving.

@benpye

You certainly can, but the overwhelming majority of new repos I find dont bother.. if they create it through github it has main, if they create it through the command line interface it has master.. besides that no one cares... Since most people use the command line interface for new repos I find the vast majority of new repos use master still.

@patricia@mastodon.social

@marind

They are listed in detail on our about page and your eally should read that page regardless as it goes over some of our rules and expectations as well

qoto.org/about/more

@trinsec

@freemo cool !! 450 feet is... about 150m ? holy shit
I remember feeling more or less at ease for my first and only dive so far -but it was so shallow and bright, there was no sense being afraid. I'm curious about the WWII wrecks around my hometown of Marseille, when I'm more experienced- and here in Mayotte we have the barrier reef to explore, it's an amazing sight.

@hadriscus Yea few people are diving as deep as I dive, we are called Technical Divers. For dives like that I'm diving with 5 tanks total. Not as scary as it sounds though, but it does take a decent amount of training.

@janvdbergh Hey, also a software developer here, though with some different focuses. Welcome its great to have you here. We have a lot of CS guys and im sure youll fit in well. Feel free to ping me anytime if your up for a chat.

Hello all,
In my professional life I’m a full stack software developer (mainly Java - Angular), with an interest in Identity and Access Management and Secure Software Development.
After work I like playing the piano, cooking and coaching at CoderDojo.
I have a general interest in technology, science and mathematics.

@akankshay58 Wonderful to have you, I run a biotech company and work a lot on the chemistry side of STEM too (I am the founder of this instance).

I look forward to chatting chemistry sometime.


Hi all!

I am Akanksha, currently working as a research tech at HHMI Janelia Research Campus, engineering bioluminescent proteins for functional imaging.

My research interests lie at the interface of chemistry, biology, and engineering 🔬. 'A tool developer' describes me best - in the dry lab, I was working on a systems biology project involving detecting hard-to-find nucleotide changes with certain effects from human transcriptome datasets. Transitioning to a wet lab, I have been engineering proteins for various applications.

Being an avid learner, I spend a lot of time reading articles from across various sub-disciplines in bioscience and biotech. I'm happiest when brainstorming ideas in molecular/synthetic biology or new tools that don't exist with a near-perfect cup of coffee☕ ! Always happy to connect over a crazy idea!

Cheers!

@trinsec

I second this, I personally stick to the web apps since it keys in to the added features. That said Fedilab is usually what i use for an app if the web interface isnt convenient for some reason.

@marind

@hadriscus I was the same, first dozen dives or so were very scary. Even just the idea of swimming in deep ocean far from shore was scary.. now im a tech diver going 450 feet down like its nothing.

@pak Great to have you here! You should love it here as we have quite a few ML/neuroscience guys including myself (I am the founder of the instance)... Really looking forward to chatting with you sometime.

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