Katherine Caley
@katherinecaley.bsky.social
Scientific programmer (she/her) at the ANU working on software for making sense out of biological sequences.
Likes: open source science, bikes, long walks in the bush
👾 Huttley Lab
✨https://katherinecaley.github.io
Likes: open source science, bikes, long walks in the bush
👾 Huttley Lab
✨https://katherinecaley.github.io
And that’s a wrap on statistical
inference in biology at Shandong University! This course was a blast and a reminder of how much motivation for science I get from teaching it 🥰
inference in biology at Shandong University! This course was a blast and a reminder of how much motivation for science I get from teaching it 🥰
March 22, 2025 at 5:00 AM
And that’s a wrap on statistical
inference in biology at Shandong University! This course was a blast and a reminder of how much motivation for science I get from teaching it 🥰
inference in biology at Shandong University! This course was a blast and a reminder of how much motivation for science I get from teaching it 🥰
Reposted by Katherine Caley
On climate protest, a superb point from @richarddenniss.bsky.social. If protest wasn't effective, govts wouldn't try to ban it. And as much as politicians like to talk about parliamentary logjams, as soon as fossil capital is threatened, they mobilise with extraordinary rapidity and efficacy.
February 18, 2025 at 1:02 PM
On climate protest, a superb point from @richarddenniss.bsky.social. If protest wasn't effective, govts wouldn't try to ban it. And as much as politicians like to talk about parliamentary logjams, as soon as fossil capital is threatened, they mobilise with extraordinary rapidity and efficacy.
I'm taking the DRY principle very seriously by linking the majority of the developer docs of a new project straight into the docs of an older/wiser project (which were thoughtfully written largely thanks to @fredjaya.bsky.social)!!
January 14, 2025 at 4:00 AM
I'm taking the DRY principle very seriously by linking the majority of the developer docs of a new project straight into the docs of an older/wiser project (which were thoughtfully written largely thanks to @fredjaya.bsky.social)!!
First day back in the office after bringing in the new year cruising around Kangaroo Island on these beauties, here goes 2025
January 13, 2025 at 11:23 PM
First day back in the office after bringing in the new year cruising around Kangaroo Island on these beauties, here goes 2025
🐍🌲 piqtree: IQ-TREE2 meets Python via cogent3! 🤝⚡️
The developers of IQ-TREE2 and cogent3 have joined forces to bring the power of IQ-TREE2 to Python users as piqtree.
piqtree exposes selected IQ-TREE2 capabilities within Python, using the cogent3 library as the interface...
The developers of IQ-TREE2 and cogent3 have joined forces to bring the power of IQ-TREE2 to Python users as piqtree.
piqtree exposes selected IQ-TREE2 capabilities within Python, using the cogent3 library as the interface...
piqtree: IQ-TREE2 meets Python via cogent3 · iqtree piqtree · Discussion #145
The developers of IQ-TREE2 and cogent3 have joined forces to bring the power of IQ-TREE2 to Python users as piqtree. piqtree exposes selected IQ-TREE2 capabilities within Python, using the cogent3 ...
github.com
December 17, 2024 at 10:00 PM
🐍🌲 piqtree: IQ-TREE2 meets Python via cogent3! 🤝⚡️
The developers of IQ-TREE2 and cogent3 have joined forces to bring the power of IQ-TREE2 to Python users as piqtree.
piqtree exposes selected IQ-TREE2 capabilities within Python, using the cogent3 library as the interface...
The developers of IQ-TREE2 and cogent3 have joined forces to bring the power of IQ-TREE2 to Python users as piqtree.
piqtree exposes selected IQ-TREE2 capabilities within Python, using the cogent3 library as the interface...
One year later: contribution graphs looking (mostly) green, git habits definitely better, but dev friendship = unparalleled.
What started off as
@katherinecaley.bsky.social
and I seeing peoples github contributions and being like "wow, so coool...", turned out to become a year (mostly) of developing (mostly) good version control/software engineering habits.
@katherinecaley.bsky.social
and I seeing peoples github contributions and being like "wow, so coool...", turned out to become a year (mostly) of developing (mostly) good version control/software engineering habits.
December 10, 2024 at 11:34 PM
One year later: contribution graphs looking (mostly) green, git habits definitely better, but dev friendship = unparalleled.