Next Episode: Debugging Go

Today we’re talking about uses for Go in the medical industry. Tim Stiles develops and maintains a Go package for synthetic biology and molecular biology called Poly. It has broad applications for biotech R&D, but also has very direct applications to medicine.

Today we’re talking about uses for Go in the medical industry. Tim Stiles develops and maintains a Go package for synthetic biology and molecular biology called Poly. It has broad applications for biotech R&D, but also has very direct applications to medicine.

Leave us a comment

Changelog++ members save 4 minutes on this episode because they made the ads disappear. Join today!

Sponsors:



Sourcegraph – Transform your code into a queryable database to create customizable visual dashboards in seconds. Sourcegraph recently launched Code Insights — now you can track what really matters to you and your team in your codebase. See how other teams are using this awesome feature at about.sourcegraph.com/code-insights
Square – Develop on the platform that sellers trust. There is a massive opportunity for developers to support Square sellers by building apps for today’s business needs. Learn more at changelog.com/square to dive into the docs, APIs, SDKs and to create your Square Developer account — tell them Changelog sent you.
Retool – The low-code platform for developers to build internal tools — Some of the best teams out there trust Retool…Brex, Coinbase, Plaid, Doordash, LegalGenius, Amazon, Allbirds, Peloton, and so many more – the developers at these teams trust Retool as the platform to build their internal tools. Try it free at retool.com/changelog

Featuring:


Tim Stiles – Twitter, GitHubNatalie Pistunovich – Twitter, GitHubIan Lopshire – Twitter, GitHub

Show Notes:



Poly on GitHub
The algorithm of the professor used by 23and me and others
Central Dogma of DNA of biology
The Three-Body Problem
AlphaFold
Gitpod
Foldit
Go library for Huggingface
SurrealDB
Booth’s Least Rotation Go Implementation and wiki

Something missing or broken? PRs welcome!

Twitter Mentions