New position in our lab for a computational researcher to develop novel bioinformatics methods and apply them to some amazing large-scale cancer genomics/omics datasets from rare cancer, prostate cancer and melanoma. https://t.co/qmZEvOEjmk
Are you a #STUDENT looking for a #PAID#internship? Look no further! Our annual call is out and we're so excited to meet the next cohort of @PawseyCentre#interns! Not to be missed, apply now - https://t.co/LAoUq5GVnY @CSIRO
Match your bioinformatics workflows to the compute they need.
Find out how in this week’s webinars with @Sydney_SIH. Featuring resources from @PawseyCentre@NCInews@GalaxyAustralia@ARDC_AU#NCRIS
12pm AEST 19 and 20 August 2021
https://t.co/G3fiRNTSuy
A perfect analogy by @BRT_LungGuy from the School of Health Sciences at Swinburne University: “Assume your mask is like underwear. So don’t take it off in the middle of public. Don’t fiddle with it in the middle of public, don’t share them with somebody else." #COVID19Aus
If you're writing computational workflows and would like to make your life a little easier, there are still places at the MiCM @nextflowio workshop on Wednesday.
Registration to this, and other workshops here: https://t.co/xXBxN0uH3l
Apparently the Australian Christian Lobby is encouraging their mob to complete this survey on Australian perceptions of abortion to skew the results. I wouldn't want to do that but here is the survey if you are interested in providing your thoughts https://t.co/tCk59ku5u2
Wondering if containers might help solve your bioinformatics challenges? Join these webinars to see how containerisation applies to your work on 15-17 June. This training collaboration is presented by @PawseyCentre. More info here: https://t.co/OcXNPY8hcK
Registrations now open: Using containers in bioinformatics. Three part series of free webinars for biologists 15-17 June. Presented by @MarcoDeLa83@PawseyCentre. More info here: https://t.co/OcXNPY8hcK
"over 30% of PhD students develop a psychiatric condition. This is a higher rate than for people working in defence and emergency services, which is about 22%."- A graduate degree is not worth sacrificing your mental health for
@AcademicChatter#phdchat
https://t.co/d5aNJRF96M