-
π πΈβπ πππππππππ’ π ππππππ ππ π³πππ πππππππ πππ πππ π³ππππππππππ
-
π± πΈβπ πππππππππ’ ππππππππ MLOps πππ Kuberenetes
-
π― πΈβπ πππππππ ππ πππππππππππ ππ π°ππππππ, π³πππ πππππππ ππ πππ π³ππππππππππ
-
π€ πΈβπ Studying Masters in Computer Science at Univetrsity of Massachusetts - Amherst
-
π¬ π°ππ πΌπ π°ππππ π°ππ’πππππ! πΈ ππ πππππ’ ππ ππππ. Feel Free to Reach Out
-
π πΏπππππππ : π·π/π·ππ/π·ππ
-
β‘ π΅ππ ππππ : π±πππ πΏπππ πΎπ πππ πΉππππππ’ πΈπ : The surprise and wonder along the way
Do you like my profile and want to build your own? It's very simple. GitHub recently added a new feature called Profile Readmes. For it to work, do the following:
- Create a special GitHub repository with your username as repository name. My username is
PranavPratapSingh
so my profile readme repository has the namePranavPratapSingh
. - Add a
README.md
to this repository. - Put some cool content about yourself (or anything you want) into
README.md
.
And that's about it. The README.md
of your profile readme repository will be displayed on your profile page. If you need inspiration, you can check out this repository which contains a curated list of nice profile readme repositories.