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[3514.82 --> 3517.38] So yeah, I felt pretty bad about that. |
[3518.10 --> 3523.48] Who was it we were at the speaker's dinner and they were sitting next to Dimitri? |
[3523.94 --> 3524.78] Oh, shush. |
[3525.02 --> 3526.14] We don't need to bring this up. |
[3526.76 --> 3528.04] No, no, no, no, no. |
[3528.04 --> 3529.30] That was me. |
[3529.78 --> 3530.82] No, no, no, no. |
[3530.90 --> 3534.42] It was one of the other speakers was talking about the race detector. |
[3535.26 --> 3536.96] And Dimitri was just like, thank you. |
[3539.56 --> 3540.76] All right. |
[3540.76 --> 3544.70] Did anybody have any other projects or news they want to talk about before we wrap this |
[3544.70 --> 3545.06] thing up? |
[3545.58 --> 3546.20] We hit it all. |
[3546.72 --> 3547.14] All right. |
[3547.48 --> 3548.00] Good work. |
[3548.42 --> 3548.90] Well, huge. |
[3548.98 --> 3550.86] Thank you to everybody on the show. |
[3551.10 --> 3553.24] Thanks to all the listeners listening right now. |
[3553.76 --> 3556.92] Huge shout out to our sponsors, Stack Impact and Arden Labs. |
[3556.92 --> 3558.90] If you haven't checked them out, please do. |
[3559.24 --> 3561.10] We will put links in the show notes. |
[3561.74 --> 3564.68] Definitely share this show with friends and colleagues. |
[3565.24 --> 3568.54] Easy way to subscribe is to go to gotime.fm. |
[3569.10 --> 3571.70] We will have a weekly email coming out shortly. |
[3571.70 --> 3573.26] So go ahead and get signed up to that. |
[3573.40 --> 3575.10] We are gotime.fm on Twitter. |
[3575.66 --> 3579.64] We have gotime.fm channel and the Gopher Slack. |
[3580.26 --> 3586.82] If you want to be on the show or have suggestions for topics or guests for the show, github.com |
[3586.82 --> 3589.16] slash gotime.fm slash ping. |
[3589.98 --> 3591.16] And with that, goodbye, everybody. |
[3591.24 --> 3592.08] We'll see you next week. |
[3592.34 --> 3595.92] And Matt Ryer will be joining us next week's show. |
[3595.92 --> 3600.60] You know, he probably rushed to finish the Gopher Eyes Me thing just before he was going to be on the show. |
[3601.38 --> 3602.56] Good for us. |
[3602.98 --> 3604.56] Now I understand everything. |
[3606.48 --> 3610.30] Well, everyone, thank you very much for having me. |
[3611.20 --> 3612.30] Last fun fact. |
[3612.88 --> 3619.56] In Florence, after Gola, I was just, you know, going around looking for a place to have lunch. |
[3620.02 --> 3621.58] We literally pick a random one. |
[3622.32 --> 3625.66] And don't I meet Matt Ryer while I'm getting out? |
[3625.92 --> 3628.88] Sitting at a table just across the room. |
[3629.42 --> 3630.92] Gophers attract Gophers. |
[3631.20 --> 3631.52] Wow. |
[3632.54 --> 3633.06] Yep. |
[3633.46 --> 3633.82] All right. |
[3633.96 --> 3634.46] Thank you, everyone. |
[3634.64 --> 3634.96] Thank you. |
[3635.36 --> 3636.42] Thank you, Filippo. |
[3636.64 --> 3637.02] Bye. |
[3637.32 --> 3637.60] Bye. |
[3640.20 --> 3643.26] Special thanks to our sponsors, Backtrace and Arden Labs. |
[3643.54 --> 3646.00] I also want to thank Breakmaster Cylinder for the awesome beats. |
[3646.38 --> 3648.02] Jonathan Youngblood for his editing skills. |
[3648.30 --> 3650.34] And, of course, Fastly for the bandwidth. |
[3655.92 --> 3674.48] Thank you, everyone. |
[3674.54 --> 3675.18] We're happy. |
[3675.24 --> 3675.50] Thanks. |
[3675.54 --> 3676.46] We're there. |
[3676.46 --> 3676.50] Thanks. |
• Charity Majors introduces herself and discusses her background with Go, specifically how she used it to rewrite Parse's platform |
• She explains why they chose Go over Ruby for the rewrite, citing performance bottlenecks and difficulties with Unicorn as major reasons |
• The conversation turns to using Go in production environments and how it compares to other languages like Ruby and Java |
• Charity discusses her recruiting strategy when choosing a language, prioritizing people who want to work with Go due to its perceived benefits |
• She emphasizes the importance of learning and adaptability in developers and shares her approach to hiring, focusing on potential rather than experience |
• The group talks about using Go at Honeycomb, with challenges around user adoption and driving interest in the product |
• Motivations for using containers and orchestration platforms |
• When to adopt containers or orchestration: based on cluster size, complexity, and team infrastructure |
• Complexity and trade-offs of adopting new technologies |
• The role of experimentation and innovation in development environments |
• Budgeting for new tech and bleeding edge innovations (e.g. "innovation tokens") |
• Introduction to Honeycomb's tool for debugging complex systems |
• Pre-computing and storing data in a column store for faster querying |
• Designing systems for interactive debugging, rather than batch processing |
• The increasing complexity of modern distributed systems and the need for better debugging tools |
• Capturing and correlating events across multiple systems to identify problems and predict issues |
• Using a common language and toolset for all stakeholders, including software engineers and DBAs |
• Writing user interfaces in Go and using JSON as a common format for data exchange |
• The target user for Honeycomb is developers who need to know how their services work and be able to own them from end to end |
• The first wave of DevOps focused on "DevOps people write better software" and "Message received", now it's time for the second wave which emphasizes developer ownership and knowledge of their systems |
• Honeycomb aims to fill a gap in current tools by allowing developers to understand what's happening now and recently across the organization and stack |
• Event-driven instrumentation in Go is easy and fun, according to a blog post written by Charity Majors |
• The conversation also touches on the importance of finding VCs who care about the product and mission, and using buzzwords such as "disrupt" and "revolutionize" |
• Charity Majors mentions that she used to hate repeating herself but has grown numb to it after founding her company |
• Cloud computing and its perceived lack of distinctiveness |
• Criticism of DevOps and security buzzwords |
• Full stack development and its limitations |
• The impact of startup culture on developer skills and expectations |
• Discussion of a project called Pixterm, which allows for images in ANSI terminals |
• Personal anecdotes about childhood experiences with TV |
• The podcasters discuss their upbringing in a homeschooling community that avoided modern society |
• A debugger series on Backtrace's blog is mentioned as a resource |
• Gobot 1.2 is released, allowing for easier hardware interaction with Go projects |
• Changes to the Go code of conduct are discussed, shifting from enforcement to guidance and support |
• The Go team releases version 1.8, featuring improvements such as graceful shutdowns, faster defer speeds, and mutex contention profiling |
• Release notes for Go 1.8 |
• New features in Go 1.8 |
• Eclipse Che web-powered IDE with terminal |
• VS Code editor updates and benefits |
• Dependency injection library by Naitik Shah |
• Go frameworks and content resources mentioned (Goji, Gorilla) |
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