-
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
PranavPratapSinghso my profile readme repository has the namePranavPratapSingh. - Add a
README.mdto 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.