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[569.44 --> 570.98] How's the time library reacting?
[571.34 --> 574.46] We just set the benchmarks to whatever we need and the client's always happy.
[575.04 --> 576.52] That's what the AI said to do.
[576.82 --> 577.76] So we trust it.
[577.94 --> 578.10] Okay.
[578.18 --> 579.08] So TinyGo, there we go.
[579.22 --> 583.32] I mean, I think WebAssembly was it, you know, we've still got a chance to do that,
[583.42 --> 583.98] Ron, don't forget.
[584.10 --> 585.28] Of course, we're in the present.
[585.40 --> 585.78] Oh, right.
[585.82 --> 586.94] Or as I call it now.
[586.94 --> 591.18] Maybe somebody could like, you know, make sure there's people working on it full time,
[591.36 --> 595.82] like as like a single purpose thing so that all these things don't come to pass.
[595.90 --> 596.30] I don't know.
[596.40 --> 596.56] Yeah.
[596.80 --> 597.20] I don't know.
[597.28 --> 598.36] I can't tell you what to do, though.
[598.54 --> 598.80] Okay.
[599.06 --> 599.74] I can't tell you what to do.
[599.78 --> 601.46] I don't want to affect all the timelines.
[601.62 --> 602.18] But I saw a blink.
[602.26 --> 603.02] I think I saw a blink.
[603.58 --> 603.86] Okay.
[604.10 --> 605.16] But then ask me the next question.
[605.40 --> 605.60] Okay.
[605.68 --> 607.20] So you said you're the last programmer.
[607.56 --> 609.80] And so it means we need to have more people join, right?
[609.80 --> 615.20] So Matt Boyle is asking about new joiners and how they lack a template for new projects
[615.20 --> 618.72] that would solve kind of the project structure, the recommended one.
[618.84 --> 621.22] So what do Go programs look like?
[621.44 --> 621.66] Oh.
[621.86 --> 622.60] Do we have a template?
[622.88 --> 625.10] That really brings up a big thing that I thought of.
[625.58 --> 630.24] There was that time back in the, you know, early 21st century when people were saying that
[630.24 --> 631.50] Go was going to be the new Java.
[631.60 --> 631.84] Yeah.
[632.10 --> 632.60] Like, do you remember?
[632.62 --> 632.92] Yeah.
[632.98 --> 634.16] Do you remember that back then?
[634.20 --> 635.82] Oh, I guess that's when you are now, right?
[635.94 --> 637.56] I guess people are still saying that, right?
[637.58 --> 638.12] Yeah, that's now.
[638.20 --> 638.38] Yeah.
[638.38 --> 639.56] We say all the time.
[639.80 --> 642.82] But the thing is, you know, Java programmers, they like frameworks.
[642.98 --> 643.68] They need frameworks.
[643.78 --> 645.12] They need frameworks that do things.
[645.22 --> 645.86] What kind of things?
[645.92 --> 648.00] Things that that business needs to do.
[648.50 --> 652.04] Frameworks in all of these kinds of businesses of things that you've never heard of.
[652.08 --> 653.10] You don't know anything about.
[653.34 --> 656.82] They spent, you know, years of their lives doing some kind of payroll system for some
[656.82 --> 657.14] business.
[657.24 --> 659.14] You don't even know what they do, right?
[659.30 --> 661.46] And it's all written in some language.
[661.46 --> 666.72] And so because there weren't all these patterns and templates for these kinds of big enterprise
[666.72 --> 669.22] applications, they just didn't exist.
[669.22 --> 674.28] So eventually when Java became self-aware, Go was no longer in the running.
[674.28 --> 679.28] So Java actually became the new Java because it signed deals of its own with all these big
[679.28 --> 679.70] companies.
[679.94 --> 680.72] And so-
[680.72 --> 681.22] Renewed contracts.
[681.42 --> 682.50] That was a big opportunity.
[682.68 --> 686.98] And that actually led to the Tabbers versus Spacers war of 2035.
[687.36 --> 687.82] Oh, no.
[688.68 --> 689.46] That sounds terrible.
[689.46 --> 690.92] I'm scared to ask for one.
[691.32 --> 692.06] Did we all lose?
[692.44 --> 693.34] There were only losers.
[693.94 --> 696.26] But it was really good for mechanical keyboards.
[698.00 --> 698.44] Okay.
[698.48 --> 699.04] Next question.
[699.16 --> 699.52] Next question.
[699.60 --> 700.46] We're running out of time.
[700.82 --> 700.98] Yeah.
[701.14 --> 706.90] Daniel Pakak also said that same point, which is he wanted to see more Java frameworks written
[706.90 --> 707.26] in Go.
[707.60 --> 708.28] It agrees with you.
[708.28 --> 708.76] Exactly.
[709.50 --> 711.52] See, that person gets it.
[711.64 --> 711.96] He gets it.
[711.98 --> 714.76] They're probably right on the front lines of that.
[714.86 --> 716.44] I don't know if they were a Tabber or a Spacer.
[716.56 --> 717.08] I don't care.
[717.18 --> 718.78] From this side of history, it doesn't matter.
[718.90 --> 720.78] We were all on the same side, the human side.
[720.94 --> 721.16] Yeah.
[721.54 --> 724.86] Could you like Google us and see what happens to me and Natalie?
[725.28 --> 726.54] Like what happens to us in the future?
[726.88 --> 727.16] Oh, no.
[727.20 --> 727.78] That's not allowed.
[728.00 --> 728.28] Okay.
[728.34 --> 728.48] Yeah.
[728.62 --> 729.00] Fair play.
[729.00 --> 734.34] My boss is co-pilot manager edition and doesn't let me do those kinds of searches.
[734.74 --> 736.44] Oh, your boss is co-pilot now.
[736.86 --> 738.42] It's not the worst boss I've ever had.
[738.90 --> 739.18] Yeah.
[739.74 --> 740.92] It's a very logical one.
[741.18 --> 745.26] DFL on Twitter wants to see more immutability and enums.