title: GopherCon 2015 Roundup date: 2015-07-28 by:
- Andrew Gerrand tags:
- conference
- report
- gopher summary: Reporting from GopherCon 2015.
A few weeks ago, Go programmers from around the world descended on Denver, Colorado for GopherCon 2015. The two-day, single-track conference attracted more than 1,250 attendees—nearly double last year's number—and featured 22 talks presented by Go community members.
{{image “gophercon2015/cowboy.jpg” 550}}
Today the organizers have posted the videos online so you can now enjoy the conference from afar:
Day 1:
- Go, Open Source, Community — Russ Cox (video) (text)
- Go kit: A Standard Library for Distributed Programming — Peter Bourgon (video) (slides)
- Delve Into Go — Derek Parker (video) (slides)
- How a complete beginner learned Go as her first backend language in 5 weeks — Audrey Lim (video) (slides)
- A Practical Guide to Preventing Deadlocks and Leaks in Go — Richard Fliam (video)
- Go GC: Solving the Latency Problem — Rick Hudson (video) (slides)
- Simplicity and Go — Katherine Cox-Buday (video) (slides)
- Rebuilding Parse.com in Go - an opinionated rewrite — Abhishek Kona (video) (slides)
- Prometheus: Designing and Implementing a Modern Monitoring Solution in Go — Björn Rabenstein (video) (slides)
- What Could Go Wrong? — Kevin Cantwell (video)
- The Roots of Go — Baishampayan Ghose (video) (slides)
Day 2:
- The Evolution of Go — Robert Griesemer (video) (slides)
- Static Code Analysis Using SSA — Ben Johnson (video) (slides)
- Go on Mobile — Hana Kim (video) (slides)
- Go Dynamic Tools — Dmitry Vyukov (video) (slides)
- Embrace the Interface — Tomás Senart (video) (slides)
- Uptime: Building Resilient Services with Go — Blake Caldwell (video) (slides)
- Cayley: Building a Graph Database — Barak Michener (video) (slides)
- Code Generation For The Sake Of Consistency — Sarah Adams (video)
- The Many Faces of Struct Tags — Sam Helman and Kyle Erf (video) (slides)
- Betting the Company on Go and Winning — Kelsey Hightower (video)
- How Go Was Made — Andrew Gerrand (video) (slides)
The hack day was also a ton of fun, with hours of lightning talks and a range of activities from programming robots to a Magic: the Gathering tournament.
Huge thanks to the event organizers Brian Ketelsen and Eric St. Martin and their production team, the sponsors, the speakers, and the attendees for making this such a fun and action-packed conference. Hope to see you there next year!