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**Adam Stacoviak:** Dropping links in the chat there... "Arise", that's the album there.
**Carlisia Thompson:** Nice...
**Brian Ketelsen:** Nice...
**Adam Stacoviak:** That's like album one or two of theirs... It may be album number two. Phenomenal.
**Brian Ketelsen:** If I hadn't shaved off all my hair, I'd be headbangin' right now.
**Adam Stacoviak:** I mean, I wore the T-shirt... I was so young though when this came out... I think I might have been like 12, maybe 13. Sepultura. Nice.
**Erik St. Martin:** So my favorite music - I think I could take an entire episode. I like to think that I have bipolar music disorder... I listen to everything, and I think it's because my dad was a DJ growing up, so I always got used to listening to everything. I get bored with a style, so usually I'll go on several ...
**Adam Stacoviak:** \[40:16\] Nice.
**Erik St. Martin:** I like hip-hop. EDM - there's certain styles I like and some I don't. I like dubstep, I love breakbeats... Recently a little country, but that's still a little new for me. I love late '80s early '90s freestyle music; that was kind of like the precursor to techno. Yeah, I listen to just about everyt...
**Adam Stacoviak:** It sounds like we all have similar tastes in music and we didn't even know it... To some degree.
**Brian Ketelsen:** I would say so, yeah.
**Erik St. Martin:** Is that an age thing? Is that a career thing?
**Adam Stacoviak:** I don't know... Could be an age thing.
**Carlisia Thompson:** We need to have a party!
**Adam Stacoviak:** I'd be surprised if I met a 20-year-old who knew Sepultura...
**Carlisia Thompson:** Yeah, me too.
**Adam Stacoviak:** And that's not ageism, that's just truth. They're just an older band, I don't even think they're popular anymore... And unless you knew somebody who turned you on to them, you probably wouldn't have heard of them, because they're kind of... I would say this kind of edge, to me. You'd hear about Guns...
**Carlisia Thompson:** I am super surprised you know Sepultura. I did not expect that.
**Adam Stacoviak:** Oh yeah, for sure. Love it. There's some bands that I love that I've forgotten, that if I heard, I'd tell you... We probably listen to the same music. Sacred Reich - phenomenal music there, as well... Lots of good stuff.
**Erik St. Martin:** Alright... You guys ready to jump into some more stuff and maybe do some Go questions? It's funny, Kyle on the GoTime channel says some of the people that are listening for the first time are like, "Is this a Go podcast?" \[laughter\]
**Adam Stacoviak:** It is, it is... It's a unique episode... It's episode 45, by the way, so if you want to go back in the backlog, do that. You'll find some awesome stuff.
**Erik St. Martin:** We are improvising. Our guest for today had some scheduling conflicts and could not make it, so we are improvising and making this episode a "get to know the hosts" episode
**Adam Stacoviak:** That's right.
**Erik St. Martin:** So here is a Go-related question from Joshua Smith on Twitter - he says "What are your thoughts on Go as a tooling language for sysadmin/ops people? What resources do you recommend for them?" Anybody wanna take this?
**Brian Ketelsen:** In terms of resources to be recommended for sysadmin and ops people, I think everything that you need as a sysadmin is in the standard library, which is one of the reasons that so many ops people like Go, especially the static compilation, too. Sysadmins in general have been using things like Perl a...
But really, in terms of resources, everything you need is in the standard library to get sysadmin work done, and it's fast.
**Erik St. Martin:** Yeah, I'd agree. You don't need to install any external modules or libraries, things like that. When you make a tool, you can pass it around, just the binary; you don't have to worry about each host having the proper version of Ruby or Python, and I write modules installed... That can be a lot of o...
**Brian Ketelsen:** Why?
**Erik St. Martin:** So yeah, it's just... Copy a binary, and done.
**Brian Ketelsen:** Wait, wait... Back the truck up. Why would anybody write sysadmin tools in Node? I'm not hating on Node, but seriously... Why would you do that?
**Erik St. Martin:** It's the language you use, so it's the language you use, right?
**Brian Ketelsen:** Oh my god... There isn't a nail in the sysadmin world that looks like that. That hammer is not built. \[laughter\] Don't get me started.
**Adam Stacoviak:** \[44:00\] Go, go Brian! Go!
**Brian Ketelsen:** Don't encourage the boy...
**Erik St. Martin:** So our next question is "How do you do a code review? Do you have a checklist, a recipe or a wiki for reviews?"
**Brian Ketelsen:** There is an awesome code review guideline that I'm pulling up right now, on the wiki code review comment.
**Adam Stacoviak:** That's two questions from Martin. This is the second question... Nice.
**Brian Ketelsen:** Let me see if I can find this...
**Erik St. Martin:** So while you're looking for that, I'll answer.
**Brian Ketelsen:** Okay.
**Erik St. Martin:** I like to have at least two people review, a fresh pair of eyes... Hopefully one is at least familiar with the domain, which... Those people usually, because they're not trying to learn the domain of what you're doing, are typically looking for style and things like code correctness, and I like to ...
There's some cool tools too, like ReviewDog, which can automatically do some stuff. There's the `gometalinter` that can catch a lot of stuff as far as stylistic things, idiomatic Go.
**Brian Ketelsen:** I hate relying on those automated tools though, because they don't bring any domain knowledge, and they don't bring any logic or reason to the code review. I think they should be part of your CI system. You shouldn't be able to just paste sloppy code into an editor and expect that to go to productio...
**Carlisia Thompson:** Oh, absolutely... You should not rely on that solely.
**Adam Stacoviak:** On that note, you've got this library that's pretty popular in JavaScript right now, called Prettier, and I think that's kind of what the purpose of that is. It's basically like, you write sloppy code and it cleans it up for you... So you're against that style of programming?
**Brian Ketelsen:** I'm not against any style of code review tools that reduce the ugliness of your code and reduce computer catchable errors, I'm just saying that that should be the first preliminary step. There should be a human behind that, actually looking at the code nicely. Just counting on `govet` or on the `gom...
**Erik St. Martin:** Anybody else have anything they wanna throw in there? Or next question...
**Adam Stacoviak:** I've got nothing.
**Carlisia Thompson:** No, me neither.
**Erik St. Martin:** Alright, next question is from Daniel Morgan on the Slack channel. He says "What's the silver bullet for impostor syndrome?" And even in his question he noted \[unintelligible 00:46:45.20\]