Bioinfo | David

Hi! I’m David. Ask me what I do, and you’ll get a different answer depending on the day.

Sometimes, I’m a plumber (unclogging data pipelines). Sometimes, a detective (finding a single SNP in 3 billion base pairs). And once a month, I’m a philosopher (arguing whether a p-value of 0.051 is really non-significant). david bioinfo

I’ve learned the hard way that a single misplaced flag in cutadapt can turn your precious RNA-seq reads into biological confetti. My morning ritual? Coffee. htop to see if my server is crying. And grep to make sure my adapter indices didn’t cross-contaminate. Sometimes, I’m a plumber (unclogging data pipelines)

The hardest part of my job isn’t the code—it’s the interpretation . I’ve learned the hard way that a single

Here’s a structured blog post tailored for someone named working in bioinformatics . It’s written to be engaging, professional, and relatable to peers in computational biology. Title: From Command Lines to Chromosomes: A Day in the Life of David, Bioinformatician

As David the bioinformatician, my real value isn’t typing fast. It’s knowing when a result is biologically plausible vs. computationally correct but nonsense .