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**Ashley McNamara:** He was not agitated, he was just emotional. He was sharing an experience and it was very vulnerable, and he cried, and then we all cried, and then we all group-hugged, and then we all had barbecue. It was great! Well, Kelsey didn't have barbecue, I'm kidding, but it was great!
**Brian Ketelsen:** That's true, he's a vegetarian.
**Ashley McNamara:** Yeah.
**Brian Ketelsen:** I kind of feel at this point that if you're not Kelsey Hightower, you're gonna have a really hard time doing a great job with a keynote, and everybody else that's just not Kelsey... You're either Kelsey, or you're not Kelsey. I mean, he deployed a Kubernetes cluster with voice control.
**Ashley McNamara:** With his voice!
**Brian Ketelsen:** Okay, Google... Ship it! How the hell are we supposed to even reach that standard? We can't.
**Ashley McNamara:** You can't. There's only one Kelsey.
**Brian Ketelsen:** The rest of us all are just not-Kelsey. I'm gonna put that in my LinkedIn - "Not Kelsey."
**Ashley McNamara:** It's already in my LinkedIn and I've had 100 people endorse me... \[laughter\]
**Brian Ketelsen:** For being not-Kelsey?
**Ashley McNamara:** Yeah. It's insulting a little bit, but you know...
**Brian Ketelsen:** It's pretty rough. So Go 1.8.2 and 1.8.3 were released... Yesterday, both. 1.8.2 was a security fix for an elliptical curve and something around there. 1.8.3. had the other fixes that had been saved up since 1.8.1. None of them sounded really big, like compiler fixes and little things... So fire up ...
**Erik St. Martin:** [Delve](https://github.com/derekparker/delve) also had a release candidate for their version one, which is awesome.
**Brian Ketelsen:** Yes. Oh, and speaking of Delve, and in an unrelated sort of way - well, semi-related... The 0.6.60 release of [Visual Studio Code](https://code.visualstudio.com/) has some really killer code lenses. They have Delve integration, so you can hover above a test and click a button and debug a test in Vis...
**Ashley McNamara:** I just switched over to VS Code, like last month, and I haven't used anything else since. It's crazy how good it is.
**Erik St. Martin:** And spoiler alert - [Ramya](https://twitter.com/ramyanexus) will actually be on the show next week.
**Brian Ketelsen:** That's right!
**Alexander Neumann:** Oh, that's nice!
**Brian Ketelsen:** Oh, much geeking out will happen.
**Ashley McNamara:** Oh, I wanna be on this show next week.
**Brian Ketelsen:** Actually, maybe you can, because I'm teaching in San Francisco next week, but why don't you sit in for me next week? You can be on the show, because I'm not gonna be here... I just realized that.
**Ashley McNamara:** Yay! I whittled into another show... Just like that. \[laughter\]
**Erik St. Martin:** So [GopherFest](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=giUatBmmb_Y) also happened a couple weeks ago. Videos are out for that on YouTube, for anybody who hasn't seen it. We'll link to that in the show notes.
That's crazy how much stuff has passed that we didn't get a chance to talk about because we were either -- I think we missed an episode, and then got chatting a lot. Other than that, Francesc did a [State Of Go talk](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dyvpF0jF3AY), too... The May 2017 edition. We can link to the SlideDeck...
**Brian Ketelsen:** I didn't think that talk was very complete. My name was not mentioned once... \[laughter\] I briefly looked through the slides, I didn't even see a link to my GitHub repositories... So I don't feel like this is a very complete State of Go talk. I mean, I appreciate that he did it...
**Ashley McNamara:** You know, it was in there, and then he said --
\[\\00:47:49.17\] And at this point in the conversation the audio just stopped recording for some reason. Computers, am I right? By the time the technical difficulties were all sorted out, Alexander just began talking about his \#FreeSoftwareFriday pick, rofi-pass. Let's hear what he had to say..
**Alexander Neumann:** It's an interactive input thingy. You can have a list of lines, pipe it into [rofi](https://github.com/DaveDavenport/rofi/); it displays an interactive list where you can select an entry, for example by typing in one of the characters that is in there, select the entry, and it will spew out this ...
And there is another shell script called [rofi-pass](https://github.com/carnager/rofi-pass), which uses the password stored at Orc password manager. It's a really nice thing in itself, it uses GPG for example, and it uses rofi and pass to do interactive password logins. It can do all kinds of things, like in the passwo...
**Ashley McNamara:** You guys can't see this, but in the notes - and I'm assuming this is from Brian, it's all caps - it says "WHAT?! ROFI-PASS? OMG!"
**Brian Ketelsen:** Yeah... I saw the show notes, that rofi-pass is in here... The first thing I did was wipe my calendar clean tonight because I am setting up rofi-pass. I've been using a pass database for my passwords for about three weeks now, because 1Password doesn't have a Linux client that's useful...
**Erik St. Martin:** Yeah, I keep tweeting at them and stuff...
**Brian Ketelsen:** No...! \[laughter\] So when I found out that there was a rofi-pass -- because I already used rofi, and it's awesome. Rofi-pass - that made my day. It might have even made my week, it's possible. But you know, that sign, when you clear your calendar because you've gotta set up rofi-pass... \[laughter...
**Alexander Neumann:** It's not so much that you need to set up; you just need to install it, run it and that's it, because all the configuration is already done when you set a pass... So you don't need to set up anything.
**Brian Ketelsen:** That's true, but I still have about 400 passwords that aren't in pass yet.
**Alexander Neumann:** \[laughs\] Me too!
**Brian Ketelsen:** So those are good ones. We'll accept two this week just for that, because that's pretty awesome.
**Erik St. Martin:** Yeah, that is really awesome. I haven't seen the rofi-pass. I've used rofi for -- I don't even know how long.
**Brian Ketelsen:** I've been using it for years, yeah.
**Erik St. Martin:** Yeah. So first it was dmenu2, and then it was rofi.
**Brian Ketelsen:** Yeah, rofi's just fast...
**Erik St. Martin:** Well, first it was dmenu, then dmenu2.
**Brian Ketelsen:** Yeah, when I was a kid... So my \#FreeSoftwareFriday is in the same vein actually, because all of this to me kind of revolves around Linux and the command line and the nice ex-Windows toys. Mine is barista, which is at [github.com/soumya92/barista](https://github.com/soumya92/barista), and it's an i...
So it's more of a toolkit for writing a status bar, and it also happens to give you a couple examples of how you can make your own... But running a custom "I did it myself" status bar in i3 is really awesome, especially when it's written in Go.
**Alexander Neumann:** Oh, I need to check this out tonight, because I'm also using [i3](https://i3wm.org/).
**Brian Ketelsen:** Oh, I knew we were gonna be fast friends, Alex. \[laughter\]
**Erik St. Martin:** Yeah, we love i3 here.
**Alexander Neumann:** I've met the author, Michael Stapelberg at the Chaos Communication Congress in Hamburg two years ago, and I brought chocolate - that was really nice - as a nice little thank you present.
**Ashley McNamara:** Now I want chocolate.
**Erik St. Martin:** Ashley, I know we invited you on last-minute, but did you have anybody you wanted to give a shoutout to?