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**Erik St. Martin:** Where's mine? |
**Brian Ketelsen:** It's in the mail, Erik. |
**Erik St. Martin:** Sweet. So for me, I’m gonna thank HashiCorp. Particularly I’m using their LRUcache this week, that they have available, but many times before, Brian too - Vagrant, Vault, Consul... There’s so many of their tools that are useful, so I’m just gonna blatantly say HashiCorp. |
So we encourage everybody else to thank their open source projects through Twitter or any other social media. Reaching out is often just a good thing as Brian spoke to in I think episode one... Just getting that comment from people makes all the difference sometimes. |
So with that said, I think we are out of time unfortunately, but it has been quite a fun episode. We definitely want to thank Bill for coming on the show with us. I know myself I’m gonna be digging through more of the stuff he's got in the training material, because I’ve got tons of free time, too. Right? All of us? |
\[laughter\] |
**Bill Kennedy:** Exactly. And thanks for having me on this, it’s been a lot of fun. |
**Erik St. Martin:** I definitely want to thank Brian and Carlisia for the panel. I think this has been one of my favorite episodes. I thank everybody who's listening; Adam told us that there's like 25 plus people listening this week live. That’s crazy. |
**Bill Kennedy:** Yeah, that’s great. It’s growing. |
**Erik St. Martin:** Yeah. We also released our first episode, which is both good and terrible. \[laughter\] |
**Brian Ketelsen:** Scary. |
**Erik St. Martin:** Yeah, definitely scary. But you can get it, so GoTime.FM will redirect to Changelog's site where our first episode is hosted while the CMS is completed. By popular demand, we have started releasing episodes before the CMS is completed. So you'll find that there, and probably within the next week so... |
I don’t know whether the newsletters sign up is on that site, but if it’s not, it is there or will be here soon. So keep checking back to the GoTime.FM to sign back up. iTunes will drop I think in about a week and a half, something like that, because they get forever to approve... Unless they tell us for some reason th... |
**Brian Ketelsen:** \[48:05\] Not approved. |
**Erik St. Martin:** So we are on Twitter @GoTimeFM when you are listening live, GoTime FM channel on Slack, you can also socialize with us. And did I miss anything? Did we get it all? |
**Brian Ketelsen:** No, it was a busy episode. |
**Erik St. Martin:** Alright, awesome. So with that, thanks everybody for being on the show and we'll see you next week. |
**Brian Ketelsen:** Bye. |
**Carlisia Thompson:** Goodbye. |
**Bill Kennedy:** Bye. |
• Introduction and sponsor announcements |
• Blake Mizerany's history with Go, starting in 2009 when Google released the language |
• How Go's performance and concurrency features solved problems for Heroku, leading them to adopt the language |
• The impact of Go on distributed systems development |
• The role of Doozer in sparking interest in Go among some developers |
• Discussion of service discovery and configuration management in Go |
• The influence of Google's Chubby paper and Paxos design on Go development |
• Blake Mizerany's experience with Go, including implementing multi-Paxos and reaching out to Rob Pike for feedback |
• The difficulty of advising new Gophers on whether to use a framework or the standard library |
• Blake's reluctance to recommend specific frameworks and his preference for using the standard library whenever possible |
• The "not invented here" syndrome where developers prefer to write their own solutions rather than relying on existing libraries |
• The trade-off between writing custom code vs. pulling in dependencies and the importance of being pragmatic about when to use each approach |
• Blake's personal experience with creating the Postgres driver for Go and his preference to focus on idiomatic Go programming |
• Advice on using Go for startups |
• Benefits of Go for distributed systems |
• Talent pool and language maturity |
• Learning curve and ease of adoption |
• Using Changelog's new site and CMS |
• Open sourcing Changelog's project |
• Present Term: a hack to embed a terminal in presentations |
• News and projects from the Go community |
• JSON-to-Go tool by Matt Holt |
• curl-to-go tool by Matt Holt |
• Gorram (command line app generator) by Nate Finch |
• Go React library for GopherJS by Bjørn Erik Pedersen |
• go-qemu library from DigitalOcean |
• Cory LaNou's Meetup group recipe repository |
• Group coding sessions are popular and well-received |
• Alternative meetup formats can be beneficial, such as group code reviews or problem-solving exercises |
• The Ruby Meetup's "code review" format could be adapted for the Go community |
• A Reviewathon-style meetup could allow for collaborative problem-solving and code review |
• Exercism-style submissions could be used to facilitate group discussions and feedback |
• New packages, such as go-conv, can provide useful functionality and improve coding efficiency |
• Database projects written in Go, like SummitDB, demonstrate the language's capabilities |
• Code School training |
• CoreOS contributions to open source community |
• Stability Badges project |
• My Looking Glass tool written in Go |
• Discussion of Erik St. Martin's use of *strace* command |
• Problem with Docker container taking excessive CPU time due to set comp profile issue |
• Jess Frazelle consulted on the issue but unable to resolve it |
• Recap and closing comments from the hosts |
• Shoutouts to sponsors Linode, Code School, and Fastly for their contributions |
**Erik St. Martin:** We are back for another episode of GoTime. It is episode number 21. Today's show is sponsored by Linode and Code School. On the show today we have myself, Erik St. Martin, we have Carlisia Thompson, say hello, Carlisia... |
**Carlisia Thompson:** Hi, everybody. |
**Erik St. Martin:** And Brian Ketelsen... |
**Brian Ketelsen:** I love that when you say "Say hello, Carlisia." It sounds like we're trained animals. \[laughter\] |
**Erik St. Martin:** And then our special guest today is a true OG (Original Gopher), Blake Mizerany. How are you, Blake? |
**Blake Mizerany:** Good, how are you? |
**Erik St. Martin:** Doing good. So you've been around since 2009-2010 I think, you started with Go? |
**Blake Mizerany:** 2009, yeah, when Google released Go... I immediately took notice, and haven't really looked back ever since. |
**Erik St. Martin:** And these days you're doing all Go, right? |
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