Skip to main content
University of California San Francisco Give to UCSF

UCSF IT Technology

Main navigation

  • About Us
    • About Us
    • Mission Areas
    • IT Directory
    • Standards and Guidelines
  • Services
    • Services
    • Status
    • Security Announcements
  • Initiatives
    • Initiatives
    • AI at UCSF
    • IT Operating Model (ITOM)
    • Project Echo
    • Project One
    • Lift & Shift | Drupal 7-to-Drupal 10 Update Project
    • Digital Accessibility Compliance Project
  • News & Events
    • News & Events
  • How-To Articles
  • Log In
Open Close Search
Open menu
Give to UCSF

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Search

    Log in to see all content. Some content is hidden to the public.

    Can't find what you're looking for? Help us improve the search functionality by reporting the expected results.

    Type

    • Event (0)
    • Homepage (0)
    • How-To (26)
    • Landing Page (0)
    • News (0)
    • Other Content (0)
    • Service (19)
    • Standard & Guideline (0)
    • Status (0)

    Service Category

    • Access & Identity (29)
    • Business Applications (152)
    • Desktop Support (63)
    • Education Applications (17)
    • Email & Collaboration (158)
    • Health Systems (13)
    • (-) Hosting & Computing (30)
    • Network & Wireless (34)
    • (-) Phones & Pager (15)
    • Research Services (40)
    • Security (52)
    • Web Services (119)

    45 Results

    • Event
    • Homepage
    • How-To
    • Landing Page
    • News
    • Other Content
    • Service
    • Standard & Guideline
    • Status
    • Access & Identity
    • Business Applications
    • Desktop Support
    • Education Applications
    • Email & Collaboration
    • Health Systems
    • Hosting & Computing
    • Network & Wireless
    • Phones & Pager
    • Research Services
    • Security
    • Web Services
    How-To

    Which GitHub do I use?

    When people say “GitHub,” they often mean the public, open-source website www.github.com — where anyone can browse and contribute to millions of public code repositories.But that’s not what we’re talking about here.At UCSF, we offer two secure, enterprise-grade GitHub environments through our UCSF GitHub Enterprise Program — both designed to support your development work safely and effectively:

    Choose the right GitHub at UCSF: Use On-Prem for P3/P4 data, Cloud for general dev—both are secure, UCSF-licensed, and free to use.

    How-To

    GitHub Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

    The UCSF GitHub Enterprise Program provides UCSF staff/affiliates with access to collaborative version control and source code management (Paid for by IT Governance Roadmap Funds). Source code control systems are essential for collaborative software development, enabling code reuse, management, and integrity. 

    Find answers to common questions about UCSF GitHub Enterprise, data use, access, and choosing the right platform for your project.

    How-To

    IT Cloud Services News

    • Technical Partner
    How-To

    About the Data Center

    • Staff
    • Technical Partner
    How-To

    IT Cloud Services Resources

    • Technical Partner
    How-To

    IT Cloud Services FAQs

    • Technical Partner
    How-To

    Getting Started with Git

    GitG=Hub offers a nice start-up guide for Git. 

    • Faculty
    • Staff
    • Student
    • Technical Partner
    • Hosting & Computing
    How-To

    Cisco Jabber UC Training: Group Chats

    You can send a group chat invite to chat with more than one person at a time. These conversations are not saved by Cisco Jabber, if you close the chat window, you will lose the chat history. Note: If you have a need to maintain chat history for collaboration, Microsoft Teams provides persistent chat history, please visit the Microsoft Teams Training page for more information.

    • Faculty
    • Staff
    • Student
    • Phones & Pager
    How-To

    Cisco Jabber UC Training: Start a Chat

    • Faculty
    • Staff
    • Student
    • Phones & Pager
    How-To

    Cisco Jabber UC Training: Video Conference

    To start a video conference call, you will need to either (1) join one of our on-premise video conferencing bridges or (2) know the conference room's SIP URI so that you can dial the room directly. Note: The on-premise bridges and the conference room URIs look like email addresses. They must end in @ucsf.edu in order for Jabber UC to route the call to the video conference infrastructure.  To initiate the video conference call:

    • Faculty
    • Staff
    • Student
    • Phones & Pager

    Pagination

    • First page « First
    • Previous page ‹ Previous
    • Page 1
    • Page 2
    • Current page 3
    • Page 4
    • Page 5
    • Next page Next ›
    • Last page Last »
    Home

    Footer Col 1

    • Status
    • Services
    • How To
    • News & Events

    Footer Col 2

    • About
    • IT Directory
    • Standards & Guidelines

    Footer Col 3

  • Get Help
  • Recognize IT Staff
  • Submit a Support Inquiry

    For emergencies and high priority issues please call the IT Service Desk (415) 514-4100

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • YouTube
    • Instagram

    © 2025 The Regents of the University of California