A deep dive into the fascinating topic of mechanical sympathy with Bill Kennedy. We talk about that plus CPU caches, how object oriented programming is not oriented to be sympathetic to the hardware, and data-oriented design.
Join the discussion
Changelog++ members support our work, get closer to the metal, and make the ads disappear. Join today!
Sponsors:
- Linode – Our cloud server of choice. Get one of the fastest, most efficient SSD cloud servers for only $5/mo. Use the code changelog2017 to get 4 months free!
Fastly – Our bandwidth partner. Fastly powers fast, secure, and scalable digital experiences. Move beyond your content delivery network to their powerful edge cloud platform.Featuring:
- Bill Kennedy – Website, GitHub, X
- Erik St. Martin – GitHub, X
- Carlisia Thompson – GitHub, LinkedIn, X
- Brian Ketelsen – GitHub, X
Show Notes:
Book: Go in ActionBill’s trainingMechanical SympathyMartin Thompson on Mechanical Sympathy (video)Scott Meyers: Cpu Caches and Why You CareMythbusting Modern Hardware to Gain ‘Mechanical Sympathy’ • Martin Thompson (video)Mike Acton “Data-Oriented Design (video)Data-Oriented Design (Or Why You Might Be Shooting Yourself in The Foot With OOP)Bill Kennedy GopherCon Hack Day Workshop: Connecting Microservices using NATSInteresting Go Projects and News
Manul - The madness vendoring utility for Go programs. Also, Dependencies & vendoring discussion on the golang-dev mailing listPretty crazy tool that outputs statsd type events and measurements to Google Analytics. Cheap measurementGit submodules are probably not the answerWhy your company shouldn’t use Git submodulesFree Software Friday
Brian - Go Validator - Package of validators and sanitizers for strings, numerics, slices and structsErik - HashiCorpCarlisia - go-plus - An Improved Go Experience For The Atom EditorSomething missing or broken? PRs welcome!