Updated in 2025, Go now has its own professional graphics ecosystem, GoGPU. Readiness: Rapid Development Phase. https://github.com/gogpu. Learn more: https://dev.to/kolkov/gogpu-a-pure-go-graphics-library-for-gpu-programming-2j5d On Sunday, 14 September 2014 at 03:24:46 UTC+4 wormra wrote:
> On Saturday, September 13, 2014 5:25:12 PM UTC-5, mps wrote: > >> You are giving advice to someone who finished this journey two years >> ago, at least and someone who follows Go from when it is announced >> publicly first time. >> > ... > > I think the developers switch to Linux because of the 'Linux ecosystem' >> and sharing culture (and quality, of course) and not just because of >> one programming language. >> > > > Finished? As you have, I've been with Go since its beginning. I'm an active > participant in FOSS in general but, of course, my perspective is always my > own. Go has been unifying. I've seen it shuffle many people into Linux > once v1 hit. Docker and several other projects that use Go are greatly > fueling this momentum. The bigger momentum is that Go is approachable and > has solid libraries. It feels self-evident to say but, so it goes, there > have been many people formerly stuck in the lands of Python, PHP, RoR, > Java, and .NET who were suddenly able to find a home in Go: a home highly > conducive to Linux (*in my view*). Meanwhile, a large portion of the > C-crowd simply carried on, likely already using Linux. I'm grateful either > way. > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "golang-nuts" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/golang-nuts/4ec951d0-0291-4f13-8f8f-4780a4a0742an%40googlegroups.com.
