Speaker(s): Adam Powell, Chet Haase, Dave Burke, Dianne Hackborn, Ficus Kirkpatrick, Gabe Cohen, Jhilmil Jain, Matias Duarte, Mike Cleron, Miles Barr, ...
Some great questions and answer, especially the discussion around
permission. But I'm not really a fan of the host, it looks like he got more
in the way than actually helped.
+Renam Philippi Antunes Yes. Agreed. OTOH, I thought the engineer from the media team was quite helpful and constructive. Romain Guy has a lot of insights, especially about enums. In general, I thought most of them provided useful answers most of the time.
Fireside Chat with MyTeksi Android Team
For the pilot episode of Fireside Chat by Google Developer Group Kuala Lumpur, we talked to the MyTeksi Android team: Corey Scott and Michael Cheah. List of ...
Watch our pilot episode of GDG Fireside Chat with MyTeksi Android team by +GDG Kuala Lumpur .If you would like to participate in GDG App Clinic & Fireside Chat program, send us your details at //www.gdg.my/appclinic.html #gdg #gdgsea #gdgwisdom
Coffee with a Googler: Chat with Francesc Campoy Flores about Go language
+LaurenceMoroney meets with Francesc Campoy Flores, afficionado of the wonderful 'Go' language. We learn what's latest with this language, including how to ...
I hope Laurence read my question, if so how do you see the future of Goo
for the web?, do you really think is worth to learn the language instead of
Python or Ruby?
+Saúl Martínez Vidals I can't read the future (wish I could!) but I think it would be great to learn Go as well as Python or Ruby. If I were to pick 2 of them, it would be Go+Python.
+Saúl Martínez Vidals Python and Ruby are not going anywhere. I would learn Python, Ruby, and Go. All three have advantages for building web applications. I can see Python/Ruby being used for complex scrapping (Scrapy) and automation while Go is used as a http server or maybe compression. Then you would have an Angular/Javascript/node.js app for your front end... Thats how I see the future. Make your future. Pura Vida!
I don't understand the use case for Go. From what he's saying, it sounds
like they're trying to make it the universal language for mobile
development platforms, but why wouldn't you just use javascript for that?
+Zane You can find the answer here:https://golang.org/doc/faq#What_is_the_purpose_of_the_project
Coffee with a Googler: Chat with Kelly Shuster (Live from Google I/O 2015)
Recording of the live talk at the Coffee with a Googler stage at Google I/O 2015, with Kelly Shuster, Android Developer - Aetna. Watch more awesome Google I/O ...