The repository is home to the onboarding information for the Pividori Lab at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.
- Read the
onboarding.md
document. It has important information about the lab's mission, expectations, lab meetings, individual meetings, source code, reproducibility, etc. Ask if you have questions. - As a member of the lab, you should be able to claim a GitHub Pro account for your personal user. This can provide free access to GitHub Copilot. Check out the GitHub Global Campus.
- Request access to the lab's GitHub organization. For this, we will need your GitHub user.
- Request access to the lab's Slack workspace. We need your email address to send you an invitation to join.
- Add yourself to the lab's team webpage. For this, you need to fork the lab's webpage GitHub repo, create a new branch, make the necessary changes, and then submit a Pull Request (PR). Follow the documentation on how to add team members and/or take a look at some PRs like this one with a postdoc role or this one with a PhD student role.
- (optional) Add your recent publications to the lab's website.
If you want visitors to know more about your research, you can add your recent publications to the lab's website.
This usually involves modifying the
_data/sources.yaml
file. See the documentation on citations for more information. - Check out these other setup steps to fully join the CU Department of Biomedical Informatics.
To propose a change, submit a pull request. Consider the following goals of the onboarding document:
- Simple: Use straightforward language and avoid jargon.
- Concise: The document should be readable in a single sitting.
- Specific: It should be targeted to the lab in question.
- Enforceable: Failure to meet expectations should have consequences.
- Living: The document is expected to change.
- Local Resources: (should this be part of a separate document?)
This repository is dedicated to the public domain.
See the LICENSE
file for more details.