| Go talks at FOSDEM 2014 |
| 24 Feb 2014 |
| Tags: fosdem, youtube, talk |
| |
| Andrew Gerrand |
| |
| * Introduction |
| |
| At [[http://fosdem.org/][FOSDEM]] on the 2nd of February 2014 members of the Go |
| community presented a series of talks in the Go Devroom. The day was a huge |
| success, with 13 great talks presented to a consistently jam-packed room. |
| |
| Video recordings of the talks are now available, and a selection of these |
| videos are presented below. |
| |
| The complete series of talks is available |
| [[http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLtLJO5JKE5YDKG4WcaNts3IVZqhDmmuBH][as a YouTube playlist]]. |
| (You can also get them directly at the |
| [[http://video.fosdem.org/2014/K4601/Sunday/][FOSDEM video archive]].) |
| |
| * Scaling with Go: YouTube's Vitess |
| |
| Google Engineer Sugu Sougoumarane described how he and his |
| team built [[https://github.com/youtube/vitess][Vitess]] in Go to help scale |
| [[https://youtube.com][YouTube]]. |
| |
| Vitess is a set of servers and tools primarily developed in Go. |
| It helps scale MySQL databases for the web, and is currently used as a |
| fundamental component of YouTube's MySQL infrastructure. |
| |
| The talk covers some history about how and why the team chose Go, and how it |
| paid off. |
| Sugu also talks abou tips and techniques used to scale Vitess using Go. |
| |
| .iframe //www.youtube.com/embed/qATTTSg6zXk 310 550 |
| |
| The slides for the talk are [[https://github.com/youtube/vitess/blob/master/doc/Vitess2014.pdf?raw=true][available here]]. |
| |
| * Camlistore |
| |
| [[http://camlistore.org/][Camlistore]] is designed to be "your personal storage |
| system for life, putting you in control, and designed to last." It's open |
| source, under nearly 4 years of active development, and extremely flexible. In |
| this talk, Brad Fitzpatrick and Mathieu Lonjaret explain why they built it, |
| what it does, and talk about its design. |
| |
| .iframe //www.youtube.com/embed/yvjeIZgykiA 310 550 |
| |
| * Write your own Go compiler |
| |
| Elliot Stoneham explains the potential for Go as a portable language and |
| reviews the Go tools that make that such an exciting possibility. |
| |
| He said: "Based on my experiences writing an experimental Go to Haxe |
| translator, I'll talk about the practical issues of code generation and runtime |
| emulation required. I'll compare some of my design decisions with those of two |
| other Go compiler/translators that build on the go.tools library. My aim is to |
| encourage you to try one of these new 'mutant' Go compilers. I hope some of you |
| will be inspired to contribute to one of them or even to write a new one of |
| your own." |
| |
| .iframe //www.youtube.com/embed/Qe8Dq7V3hXY 310 550 |
| |
| * More |
| |
| There were many more great talks, so please check out the complete series |
| [[http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLtLJO5JKE5YDKG4WcaNts3IVZqhDmmuBH][as a YouTube playlist]]. |
| In particular, the [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cwpI5ONWGxc&list=PLtLJO5JKE5YDKG4WcaNts3IVZqhDmmuBH&index=7][lightning talks]] were a lot of fun. |
| |
| I would like to give my personal thanks to the excellent speakers, Mathieu |
| Lonjaret for managing the video gear, and to the FOSDEM staff for making all |
| this possible. |
| |