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Alright, so with that, I wanna thank everybody for being on the show. Huge thank you to you, Steve, for coming on the show and talking with us today. |
**Steve Francia:** Happy to do it. Thanks for inviting me. |
**Erik St. Martin:** And thank you to all the listeners who are listening live and will be listening to this. Huge shoutout to our sponsors, Backtrace and Ultimate Go. Forward this to anybody who might like to listen to our weekly podcast. We are on [Twitter](https://twitter.com/GoTimeFM), [ping](https://github.com/GoT... |
**Steve Francia:** Bye! |
**Carlisia Thompson:** Goodbye, everyone. |
**Johnny Boursiquot:** Bye! |
• Introduction and panel discussion |
• Mark Bates' Dunkin' Donuts appearance |
• Discussion of the "big secret" |
• Announcment of Buffalo, a new web framework in Go |
• Explanation of Buffalo's purpose and features |
• Discussion of why Mark Bates created Buffalo, including its motivations and goals |
• Discussion about shaming Brian Ketelsen for not knowing frontend work |
• Introduction of asset pipeline and its use in Buffalo framework |
• Explanation of how Buffalo builds a single binary containing Go code, assets, and migrations |
• Mark Bates' experience with using Buffalo to develop websites and its benefits |
• Discussion of third-party libraries used in Buffalo, including gorilla-mux, go.rice, raymond, and pop |
• Overview of the features and packages included in Buffalo |
• Discussion of the "Evaluate" console tool |
• Overview of Grift library and its use in Go development |
• Mention of various Go libraries developed by Mark Bates, including Goth, pop, Buffalo, and fsnotify |
• Conversation about maintaining open-source projects and the need for contributors |
• Discussion of Migrate library issues and potential forks or alternatives |
• Discussion of Buffalo's future development features |
• Release of 0.7.0 and its build compatibility |
• Planned features for Buffalo, including generators, background jobs, and form builders |
• Validation feature and generator integration |
• Mark Bates' productivity and time management |
• Secret to his productivity: Dunkin' Donuts coffee and possibly Guinness beer |
• Release of Grumpy, a Go backend to a Python interpreter |
• Performance improvements with Grumpy (up to 1000% faster) |
• Discussion on why Google released Grumpy (for performance, not to boost Go adoption) |
• GopherCon 2017 CFP and registration now open |
• Changes to GopherCon format, including Community Day and workshop opportunities |
• PaperCall.io used for this year's CFP submission process |
• Experimentation with Buffalo versus Rails on the PaperCall platform |
• GopherCon security measures |
• Lightning talks at GopherCon |
• Go 1.8 release party organization |
• New tools and apps: Releaser, Mutagen, SyncThing |
• Backup and synchronization strategies (Dropbox vs. Git) |
• Discussion of the open-source profiling tool Prism |
• Comparison between Prism and pprof |
• Historical diff feature in Prism for viewing changes over time |
• #FreeSoftwareFriday shoutouts |
• Refresh library for Go projects, which rebuilds and restarts the binary when files change |
• Common mistakes and frustrations developers experience, such as rebuilding binaries manually or using host networking incorrectly |
• Dave Cheney's contributions to the Go community |
• The errors package not being in the standard library |
• Shout out for the Octotree plugin |
• Mark Bates' comedy routine and unexpected appearance on the show |
**Erik St. Martin:** Alright everybody, welcome back for another episode of GoTime. We are back from a long two-week vacation. Hopefully everybody got some rest and relaxation and maybe some detox time. On today's show the panel consists of myself, Erik St. Martin, Carlisia Pinto is also on the call, say h-- |
**Carlisia Thompson:** Hi, everybody. \[laughter\] |
**Erik St. Martin:** Oh, you're ruining it! I thought I was \[unintelligible 00:01:01.09\] |
**Brian Ketelsen:** You ruined it, Carlisia! Game over! |
**Mark Bates:** You're also like a well-oiled machine, let me just throw that one out there. Clearly, this has been practiced several times. |
**Erik St. Martin:** I was holding back the laughter until Carlisia -- alright, so we also have Brian Ketelsen... |
**Brian Ketelsen:** Hello! |
**Erik St. Martin:** There was a slight delay there... |
**Brian Ketelsen:** Hello! |
**Erik St. Martin:** And today's special guest, live from Dunkin' Donuts, apparently, is Mark Bates. |
**Mark Bates:** Hello. |
**Brian Ketelsen:** Are you taking orders, Mark? |
**Mark Bates:**\[01:39\] It's a very caffeinated Mark Bates sitting here in the corner of a Dunkin' Donuts. \[laughter\] Coming to you live... |
**Brian Ketelsen:** Thank you for sprinting to Dunkin' Donuts to get power, since the power went out in your block; we appreciate that very much. |
**Mark Bates:** Oh, I'm glad I could eventually find a place. |
**Brian Ketelsen:** But the show must go on! |
**Mark Bates:** That's what they say. |
**Brian Ketelsen:** We have a saying in the show business, and we are in show business; even though Adam doesn't follow us on Twitter, we are in show business, and that saying is that the show must go on. |
**Mark Bates:** I've got some great stories about that, but it's probably not safe for this podcast. |
**Brian Ketelsen:** This is a family-friendly podcast. Thanks for filtering yourself, we appreciate it. |
**Mark Bates:** Then we're gonna be in trouble, because almost all of my stories are highly inappropriate. \[laughs\] |
**Brian Ketelsen:** Oh, we're in trouble... |
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