Go Time – Episode #43

Getting Better, Mentoring, Drawing Gophers

with Ashley McNamara

All Episodes

Ashley McNamara joined the show to talk about sharing developer experiences, seeking help from the community, getting people excited about STEM, and other interesting Go projects and news.

Featuring

Sponsors

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Notes & Links

📝 Edit Notes

Gopherize.me

My First Week at Pivotal

Introduction to Programming - Curated list of resources for budding developers

STEM Resources For Kids

Verizon #weneedmore | Anthem :30


Interesting Go Projects and News

Ruby implemented in Go

Ruby-like language written in Go

Træfik, a modern reverse proxy < Gophercon sponsors too!

Introducing the Developer Experience Working Group

go tool trace

Caddy launch date 4/20 + cute stickers for order


Free Software Friday!

Each week on the show we give a shout out to an open source project or community (or maintainer) that’s made an impact in our day to day developer lives.

Erik - Grafana + InfluxDB + Telegraf + Mosquitto

Carlisia - ✨ All Contributors ✨

Brian - Gobot, Ron Evans for the win…and also Erik

Ashley - Hugo 0.20 Released: Custom Output Formats!

Transcript

📝 Edit Transcript

Changelog

Play the audio to listen along while you enjoy the transcript. 🎧

Alright everybody, welcome back for another episode of GoTime. Today is episode number 43, and our sponsors for today are Toptal and DataDog.

On the show today we have myself, Erik St. Martin, we also have Carlisia Pinto - say hi, Carlisia…

Hi, everybody.

And Brian finally made it on the show…

Oh, cut me some slack… I haven’t had caffeine or sleep in like two weeks.

[laughs] And our special guest today is a principal technologist at Pivotal and one of our favorite Gopher artists, Ashley McNamara. Do you wanna give everybody a brief little intro of who you are and some of the stuff you’re working on?

Yeah, so I am Ashley McNamara and I do a lot of Gopher artwork. [laughs]

Our favorite Gopher artwork!

Our favorite Gopher artwork… I created a little avatar generator called Gopherize.me, and then I’ve done the GopherCon… Logo, I guess you would call it this year, as well as a number of other art pieces in the Go community, because I love that silly Gopher so much.

Every adorable Gopher on the internet, every one, comes from Ashley.

It’s been a streak lately, I’ll give you that.

The machine box logo is pretty baller, too… That little robot is awesome.

Oh my god… I love that little robot so much!

I have to say I’m a little jealous though, because you can do both artwork and programming. I unfortunately cannot.

Yeah, but being a Jill of all trades has some setbacks… I feel like I’m master of none. I feel like I’m always trying to learn things in different places, and never mastering one thing.

That’s perfect!

Oh, I feel that way every day!

Oh… Okay, so I’m normal. This is amazing.

That’s so normal…

We call that life, right?

Oh, okay…

Especially with tech… So many new things; you just have to try focus and not have anxiety over what you don’t know and you’re not learning.

Yeah, that’s why it’s Xanax…

Now Xanax… I can get behind Xanax. [laughter]

Family friendly here… [laughs]

It’s family friendly.

Xanax is family friendly.

It definitely is.

The more Xanax I have, the more friendly I am. [laughter]

I’d say that’s pretty normal though, because everything in technology - it’s impossible to know all areas. You’ll see something somebody else did and you’re like “Oh, I wish I was better at that”, and it’s like… You know, recently I’ve loved tinkering with hardware, but I’m not a hardware guy, so I see projects other people have done and I’m like “That would probably take me six years…” and it seemed like they did it in a week.

Yeah, but do you feel like that about everything? Because I feel like that about everything, where I’m like “Oh man, I wish I was better at that.” I feel like I say that a lot. “I wish I was better at git, I wish I was better at all of the things…”

Brian is a testament to it, ask him… I’m terrible about that; I think I’m good at nothing. [laughter]

[04:00] It’s true. I have to force Erik to take credit for all the awesome stuff he does. He’s like “No, this isn’t that cool.” Are you kidding me?! So I just post it for him. I do it all the time. I have absolutely no fear.

Impostor syndrome is real.

Open sourcing Erik’s projects is a service, that’s my job.

Oh, I love that. Alright…

I think it’s too hard… There’s just too much we wanna do. There’s a quote, like a Venn diagram that I saw one time where it’s like “What you think other people know versus what they actually know”, and you see the surface…

It was a pie chart, I think.

Yeah, and you’re just kind of looking at it and you think they know everything to know about that topic, but really you’re kind of seeing all they know about it in that little bit.

It’s the Facebook view.

You know, the internet… I love the internet, because it brings everybody together, and exposes us to a lot of stuff. But I hate it in the same way, because you’re also comparing yourself to a highly curated list of the best the world has to offer, every single day.

Totally.

You’re looking around at these cool things and you think everybody is cooler than – like, “I’m not a millionaire at 20? I’m a failure in life…” [laughter]

So what are some of the things that you wish you knew better, Ashley?

Oh geez, everything.

At least lately… Everything! [laughter]

At least lately - Kubernetes is definitely on my list. Microservices in general, I wish I knew a lot more than I do. The good news is that community is awesome, so if I don’t know something - which often times I don’t - I always know somebody who does. There are always awesome people who are willing to teach me, like Kelsey Hightower, for example. Brian is another example - I ask him dumb questions about Go all the time. And everyone is just so patient…

You don’t ask dumb questions…

I super do…

Your questions aren’t dumb. There are no dumb questions.

I don’t ask dumb questions.

You gotta understand that when you ask me a question, I just turn around and ask Erik and give you the answer.

Oh great, okay… So I’m gonna skip the middleman. See you, Brian…

No, I like being the middleman. I like feeling important.

Okay, killing two birds with one stone then… It’s what I do.

I don’t think there’s dumb questions though either, because really if you know the answer, it easy; if you don’t, it can be impossible, right?

It’s hard… You may feel dumb because it seems like a trivial thing, but if you’ve never used it, how would you know, right?

If you think about basic life like that… If you saw a weed eater, and you’ve never seen one before, it’s gonna be a foreign object, like “How do you start this thing? What do you use it for?”

A weed eater?

I picked a random, inanimate object.

That is random, dude!

[laughs] It’s probably because people were out there mowing the lawn earlier…

Oh, that makes sense. You saw the livestream of the hedges behind my house and you thought “Somebody needs to trim that damn thing.”

We didn’t wanna say it, but this is your intervention…

Thank you.

That’s my way of insinuating that Brian doesn’t know how to use one. [laughter]

Erik, I don’t know if you can explain it…

The shade is rough on this show. So tell me, Ashley, how did you come across all of the awesome stuff that you put on your learning to program wikis? Because I was looking through that – I don’t know, it was about two months ago when I was working on some educational material training stuff and I thought “My god! This is like the best resource ever!” and it’s got like 50 stars or something on GitHub. I don’t understand why there aren’t a thousand million stars.

[07:46] I think it’s because I don’t advertise is as much as I maybe should. I started it because I went to a bootcamp to learn Python. That’s sort of how I got into programming to begin with. I was contributing docs to OpenStack, and I wanted to contribute more, so I started to learn Python and thought “I can’t do this by myself. This is impossible. Do I need to go get a CS degree? Who has time for that?!”

So I found this bootcamp and I went to this bootcamp, and it was terrible. They weren’t teaching real-world software development. They weren’t. Contributing to open source was irrelevant to them. Basically, every question I asked was “You don’t need to know that…”, but I needed to know all of those things. So I decided to go out and find free resources, and I started out with Zed Shaw’s “Learn Python The Hard Way”…

I love his stuff.

I love his stuff too, he’s so great. And I sent him an email and he said, “Why don’t you just come over? I’ll teach you.” [laughter] And I learned more at Zed’s house than I learned in three months at this bootcamp.

That’s so awesome.

And I wanted to make sure that I helped other people in my situation. You don’t need to drop $15,000 to learn to code. You are going to need in-person help, but there are plenty of people that mentor. All you have to do is ask, and people are so afraid to ask…

So I wanted to put together this resource where people have access at a glance to - at sort of a glance; it’s huge - a free resource where you can learn on your own. Now I’m working on putting together a mentor program as well, where we can pair junior developers with seasoned developers and get some real world experience…

That’s so cool.

…so that these people aren’t alone.

I think the other side of it too - and having a mentor is important here - is similar to what we were just talking about, where you feel like “I wish I knew all these things better and I don’t know them enough.” There’s things that I’ve learned with people that kind of are in my circle - trying to get into programming is a psychological thing, too. There’s so many little things… It’s like, “Oh well, I’m trying to learn this, but what is that?” and you go down this rabbit hole… And people feel like “I’m just not smart enough to do this”, and they don’t realize it’s just a lot of little things. It’s a lot of time, and even most of us struggle like that on a day-to-day basis.

We don’t set out immediately knowing how to solve a problem. I think we’ve just all grown comfortable in the struggle, or sometimes even grow to enjoy it, trying to figure out how this thing works…

Right…

[laughs]

So when you come in, I think it can be demotivating, because you’re just like, “Oh, I’m just not cut out… I just can’t get this to work. I don’t understand it.”

Yeah, that’s a great point. Sorry, did I cut you off? Sorry, not sorry… [laughter]

Yeah, shut up, Erik. Carlisia needs to talk now.

No, I think the essence of programming is being comfortable with not knowing, and having your own strategies for putting the pieces of the puzzle together. For me sometimes it’s study from the bottom and going up; sometimes it’s starting from the outside, going in… There’s all sorts of strategies that I use to solve problems. A lot of times it’s breaking things apart, just solving one piece, and making sure I understand - even just renaming things, in the process of solving a problem. And that’s fun… But if you think that you need to go in and you need to know – it’s not about knowing, it’s about figuring it out, and you need to like the process of figuring things out.

Enjoy the journey…

Yeah… Because mostly we don’t know shit… We’re just figuring stuff out.

This is a family show!

[12:06] Oh, that’s not family-friendly?

Family show, Carlisia!

I’m gonna be bleeped.

We miss Ashley’s alternate words and phrases list…

I thought that was family-friendly, sorry… [laughter]

You know what? Here’s family-friendly: you be YOU! Don’t let anybody tell you how to live your life.

We’re just gonna be bleeped.

Don’t bleep us, it’s so rude…

Yeah, you can’t censor me.

Yeah, don’t do that. I had to teach myself to break problems down into micro-problems. That’s also something that you need to learn as a developer… That you’re better off learning with a mentor than you are at a school. I read so many books like “How to think like a programmer”… None of those books were helpful, but trial and error was helpful.

Well, I think we all do that instinctively, but we don’t know we’re doing it, and it’s really hard for someone to step back and say, “Okay, you really just need to find the tiniest piece of this and solve that, and then find the next tiny piece and solve that”, because that’s what we all do. Even if you don’t know what to search for on Stack Overflow, you’ve gotta figure it out, and it’s just one tiny piece at a time. But it’s hard to sell that to people, because you don’t really know that that’s what you’re doing.

Some people do it instinctively, some people have to be taught, but it’s how we’re all solving the problems. Nobody goes off in a weekend and writes InfluxDB.

Of course not, but I’ve had so many people come to me and say, “I wanna build this thing. Where do I start?” They don’t know where to start in the lifecycle, right? They’re thinking of this thing that they want, but they have no idea where to start building it.

Yeah, I guess there’s a degree of that, because it’s almost like, if you’re ever done freelance work or consulting work where you deal with people who want you to build something for them and they’re not familiar with tech, they don’t know it’s possible, so they don’t really know where to begin with it. Their demands are different than the problem they’re actually trying to solve, because their demands are based on what they know about tech.

So I think there’s a degree of that when you start… You don’t even know that these things are possible, so where do you look? So yeah, I guess there’s a lot of that into thinking like a programmer. I do it with math, too. People think I can do a lot of math in my head, and it’s like, you just break it down into simpler problems, right? 15 x 27… I don’t know what that is off the top of my head, but I know what 10 x 20 is, and things like that, you know?

I think the other side is confidence, too. A friend of mine just got his bachelor’s degree in CompSci, and he’s like “I don’t know when I’ll be ready to write code.” It’s like, “You’ve been ready… Since day one.” It’s just that confidence level of “When will I know enough to be able to do this?” and that’s kind of where this thought got triggered for me.

You think about it… We do this all the time. If you started your day knowing 100% how you were gonna do what your task was for that day, and this was every day of your life, it would be boring… So boring! We like solving new problems, so we kind of want the uncharted territory.

No, absolutely! That’s one of the reasons why I went to Pivotal. It’s really exciting to be the dumb kid in class again.

If you’re not in the pool with lots of bigger fish, you’re not learning.

So true!

So what are you doing at Pivotal? Tell us…

What I didn’t know about Pivotal is that they have a really passionate set of Go developers. Pivotal started out as a Ruby on Rails shop, and most of CF(Cloud Foundry) was Ruby. I had no idea until I tweeted that I was looking for a job and I got a message from one of the Go developers at Pivotal…

[16:09] So I started doing some research, and I noticed that Pivotal has about 35 repos that are Go. It’s like, this is weird that nobody knows about this. Is it because they are making an enterprise product and people don’t care about that as much…? Or what’s the deal?

So I started interviewing and I realized that they just didn’t have a lot of people to be the face in that community, to evangelize that. So that’s what I’m doing at Pivotal - making the Go community aware of what we have to offer.

First of all, CF is Cloud Foundry, right?

Correct, yes.

Maybe you wanna tell us what that even is… But what is the important stuff that’s working? What type of developers will benefit from what Pivotal has to offer?

So you’re gonna have to cut me a little bit of slack on this, because it’s day four for me at Pivotal…

Consider it done! Totally.

But many of the engineers are using a scripting language. They’re writing small tools, like lightweight CLIs that might have once been done in Ruby or Bash, and it’s especially handy when you want to, say, write a little diagnostic test on a Mac and then run it on an arbitrary Linux container without messing with the dependencies or worrying about Bash mysteries… So we’re doing a lot of testing.

There’s a significant amount of Cloud Foundry that’s been completely rewritten in Go. Their router, Diego - that’s a huge, huge piece of Cloud Foundry that’s written in Go, and they had a nice blog post about that a year or two ago, on just how much Go brought to the game in that rewrite.

Yeah, Go made it possible for them to run Diego on Linux and Windows, and that helped a lot with Pivotal’s .NET story.

I think Onsi works at Pivotal too, who created Ginkgo and Gomega, which is like a BDD framework

He does…

That’s cool.

Yeah, so a lot of great Gophers at Pivotal, who I didn’t even know until recently, and I feel sort of bad about that. I feel like everyone should know about them.

Gophers are taking over.

I kind of feel like they’re a little quiet in the Go world though, in general…

Possibly…

They’re not making enough noise, so they had to hire somebody to make more noise… [laughter]

Well, hello… Here I am.

It’s Ashley. It’s the Ashley party.

Talking about Ashley party… What is your talk at GopherCon going to be about?

Oh my gosh…

I’m so curious!

I wavered on this a couple of times, so right now it says My journey to Go, and I’ve talked to a couple of people about it; it feels pretentious in a way, like “Who cares about my specific journey?”, but at the same time, “Could it be helpful for people that are learning?” I don’t know, so I’m not a hundred percent sure, to be honest.

I wanna go back to that and give you my opinion, but do you have an alternative to that? Were you thinking about another talk?

I have no idea… I would love to hear your opinion.

My opinion on the original talk, your journey to go - I think it can be extremely useful, because Go is growing tremendously, and there’s always new people coming into the language… And when people are coming into a new language, of course they wanna see steps that people who are practicing have taken to get to where they are.

[20:04] So it can be inspiring, it can be informative… Definitely very helpful. And even for veterans, it’s a chance for us to look back and see “Hey, what’s that person’s journey, compared to my journey?” I mean, I like talks like that.

I do too, but…

I mirror Carlisia’s opinion. I think that you draw a lot of inspiration from it. A lot of people coming in - we talked about confidence, and things… Some of the favorite topics that we’ve had on this show are when people start giving their back-story and people realize that their journey is very similar to other people… That not everybody went to Ivy League schools and got PhD’s and things like that. So I think that it’s inspiring and motivating and it gives people a little confidence, and also to Carlisia’s point, for veterans, it shows where the struggle points are for people. Like, “How can we help adoption?”, because we see somebody stumbled through their journey, and something they probably shouldn’t have stumbled over, how can we do that better?

You’re absolutely right.

That’s the first time anybody has ever said that on this show. [laughter]

That Erik is right? [laughs]

That everybody’s right…

Alright, that’s a wrap… I’m gonna split on a high note… [laughter] We should take our first sponsored break, though…

It’s time - exactly time. I was supposed to watch that. It’s exactly time right now. Take a sponsored break, Erik.

Alright. So our first sponsor for today is Toptal.

Alright, we are back, talking with Ashley McNamara. So just before this sponsor break we were talking about your talk, and inspiring future Gophers and veterans… Brian, did you have a take on this?

I definitely do. I was thinking at it more from the veteran angle. It’s already been mentioned, but my favorite idea about hearing the journey talks from multiple different angles is increasing adoption and how we can lower that friction and make it easier for anybody anywhere to come into Go. I know there are a lot of pain points, I see it when I’m teaching, but getting as many people’s points of view as possible is absolutely critical.

I agree.

I think the “Like me” story is really important, too. We all have people we relate to, and when you can see somebody who’s very similar to you in your upbringing and your journey, and they can see what their journey could look like a year or two from now, if they just kind of stay the course, I think that’s important and I think it’s motivating. It keeps people on track.

Yeah, that’s a very good choice, because Ashley said that she feels that maybe it’s pretentious to do a talk like that, and I assume it’s because she doesn’t have ten years of experience… But I think not necessarily that it’s better - I think it’s good to have different perspectives from a person who’s only been programming with Go for a couple years, as well as somebody who’s been programming with Go for 15 years. The people who are coming in, they will be able to relate a lot better to someone who’s been programming for a couple years, because it’s more manageable for them to visualize themselves two years ahead of time.

[24:07] Yeah, you’re absolutely right.

They will relate to that talk a lot more than if you have 15 years programming in Go.

I think that some of the most moving parts of talks like these are hearing some of the failures, too… Where people can see that it’s not all perfect, that other people struggled and they failed and fell off and got back on, and things like that. I think that’s part of the motivating thing. I mean, if you stood up and just told everybody all your awesome accomplishments and were like “You may all now bow” and mic drop - that’d be a bit pretentious, but…

I might mic drop anyway… I mean, if I’m gonna be holding a mic, I feel obligated to mic drop. But yeah, there are way more failures than successes, which is part of the job.

Alright, that’s it - mic drop or get the hell out. Those are the rules.

I have an idea now…

We totally need to build some kind of statue or a toy of a gopher doing a mic drop that we give all speakers…

Oh my god! The best speaker gift ever!

Give me a week.

Do it, we’re in! That’s so awesome!

That’s happening

You might just have to get it made.

Drop the mic… We can get it made pretty easily. Oh, that’s beautiful… Wow. I just got a little shiver.

Yeah, give me a week. That will exist.

It’s so nice having friends in high places.

Every time I turn around, Ashley’s like “Hey, I made you a logo for X project.” I’m like “Are you kidding me? That’s so awesome!” [laughter]

Do you know what the hard part about having people in these positions are? We will never teach ourselves, because we don’t have to.

No, I don’t need to learn how to make pretty things on Photoshop, or whatever you guys use for that pretty stuff…

I just don’t have the creativity…

See, you’re doing that impostor thing. What you need to do is visualize small steps towards your success, Erik.

Do I picture an eye first, and then the microphone, and…

No, it’s like that thing that’s always traveling the internet - you draw the two circles, and then the next step, finish the owl. [laughter]

Just like that!

So how did gopherize.me came about? Did you have the idea?

No, it was not my idea at all. I just take credit for it. So I was creating these avatars… I created them initially for GopherCon, because I wanted to have placeholders for the speakers, and I love punny things, so I wanted to name them, so it was all really selfish. Eventually I ended up making a Brian gopher, and sent it to him. He tweeted about it, and then I made an Erik gopher, and then I made a Mark gopher, and eventually I was making all of these gophers… Then Todd on Twitter said, “Hey, you should just make an avatar generator”, and 24 hours later there was an avatar generator, with the help of Matt.

Yeah, super helpful. It would have taken me a lot longer than 24 hours to draw it myself.

I’m gonna tell you… That made me mad. The tweet happened at like 8 o’clock in the morning, so the first thing I did was register a domain. And I thought as soon as work is over, I’m gonna start on this. By the time work was over, it was done. Damn you, Matt Ryer!

He’s so quick! He’s so quick! Yeah, I feel bad… For only like a couple hours.

Quarter of a millisecond?

Yeah…

That’s alright.

Do you know how many avatars have been generated with that?

[28:00] I haven’t looked at the analytics in a while… But every day I see at least one avatar on Twitter, at least. They’re every everywhere, which is awesome!

It’s my entire Twitter feed… And Slack, too!

Yeah, I totally adopted it as my avatar.

It was obviously something that the community needed, and eventually it will grow to be bigger and better… When we all have time.

So what’s the next bigger and better step for Gopherize.me?

Well, I think that people need to be able to use a color picker to pick their own hair color; there’s that. Maybe same for the color of the gopher; that way I can cut out a lot of the duplicate hairstyles in different colors. That would be nice.

Then I would like to be able to have people customize a T-Shirt.

That’d be awesome… Like, get your own gopher on your own T-shirt.

Well, no… Like, the gopher’s T-shirt. Upload a photo - that will be on there, instead of having all of these T-shirts that you’re obligated to use if you want a T-shirt. Type a message on, something… So that’s next.

Nice. But yeah, just kind of upload your own image to put on your T-shirt.

Exactly.

That’d be pretty cool.

You’re talking at OSCON this year, aren’t you?

I am, yeah.

What’s your topic at OSCON?

Building a command line applications with Go. I’ll be doing it with Steve Francia.

Oh, nice!

Nice! The Cobra guy.

The Hugo guy, too.

Hugo guy, yes.

And now the Go team guy.

That’s right.

I said Cobra because it’s the CLI related talk… But he’s many things, for sure.

He’s many things, but yes, we will be using Cobra. We will also be doing it at Craft Camp, which is coming up pretty soon… Except there we have to make a three-hour talk sixty minutes, I think. So that will be fun.

“And this is how you do it. Thanksbye.”

[laughs] Right, exactly.

So we kind of moved away from the topic, but there was one that I wanted to mention, too. We were talking about your resources to learn; one of them we didn’t point out specifically was for kids. I thought that was really cool, too.

Yeah, so I actually made that one first. That one came from – my child is extremely nerdy. He’s always breaking things. About a week ago he decided that he wanted to make a plasma ball himself, and he would put steel wool in the microwave… [laughter] So that was fun… We have a book called The Dangerous Book For Boys, and it’s basically just ways to hurt yourself. We’re constantly doing things like that… So I wanted to make sure that I had resources to do those things with him, but also I know that other people have nerdy kids as well, so I decided to share it.

That’s awesome.

It’s a good book.

I’ve seen that book… It makes my blood boil. Why is it for boys? Everything in there a girl can do. Seriously…

Good point.

Oh my gosh…

We should rebrand it.

Imagine girls reading that book… What does it mean? Only boys are allowed? Because that’s how little kids think… First grade, second grade, third grade - that’s how they think.

Well, that’s the reason why this industry will not be equal in our generation… Or our kids’ generation.

[32:02] Sorry for side-tracking… Let’s go back.

Well, it’s a really good point, Carlisia.

Yeah, we need to start with our kids. It’s really hard to change perception for people… This is why they have the C-level suites at banks and all that stuff; it’s the good ol’ boys club. It’s really hard to change their opinions, but it’s really important for the newer generations, and that’s why I like a lot of things that are going on with millennials and making these very important topics.

Wait, why is it only millennials? Why did they get all the credit? [laughter]

I don’t know, I have one of those, too… But on that topic, he wants to change her major to more computer science type things from business. She went to her school counselor with her change list, and the counselor was like “Honey, this is gonna be too hard for you. You should probably just stick with business…”

Oh my god…

Oh my god…

I did sign her up for any of the classes she wanted.

Did you go back and give this woman a talking, too?

I didn’t find out until way later, unfortunately… Because I would have had words.

Not family-friendly ones?

They would not be from that list I put in Slack, I’ll tell you that.

I hate the perception that we put on people that these are elite things that only the super smart do… I think it was a recording of Bryan Liles at one of the GopherCons… He said “Everybody thinks you have to be ridiculously smart, and there are some people that are just born geniuses that do some of the stuff that we may never do, or would take us ten times as long”, but for most of us it’s just work. You just put in the time… It’s not overly difficult, it’s just a lot of things to know; when you put the time in, you acquire it. Any business domain is that way, too. You have to learn about that industry.

You come in, you can have an MBA, but you get dropped in an industry you’ve never worked in before; there’s stuff to learn.

That’s absolutely true, but I am willing to bet that this woman said what she said based on gender.

I agree.

It’s a separate thing, and I think it’s even worse than assuming that certain elitist things require somebody to be super smart; that’s one big problem. But assuming that a person because they are not a straight male - or maybe even a straight white male - they’re not smart enough to do harder work is just… Sigh!

I hate it because usually I like to play devil’s advocate; I like to at least understand the position somebody’s coming from, even if I don’t agree with them. But in this, I truly don’t understand how anybody can think that somehow women are not smart enough to do that.

Well, this was a woman, too. It’s even worse when it’s a woman saying “No, you can’t do that, honey.”

I think that it’s way more common that we think, especially outside of our industry. When you’re in college, it seems impossible to learn this, I’m sure, from anyone who doesn’t know about it. I think that the sexism is worse outside of our industry.

I think it comes to perseverance, right? It’s not about born talent, it’s about who’s gonna take the struggle and continue through it, and who’s gonna look at it and be like, “Oh, this is a lot to learn. I just don’t wanna do it anymore.” When we tell people, even if she continues on that path, now it’s gonna be in her head every time she’s struggling with something, what this advisor told her, that she’s not cut out to do it. And then it’s only more likely that she’s going to quit, because she’s like “Oh, you know what? They were right all along”, and that’s not true. Everybody’s struggles. It’s a lot to learn.

[36:17] That’s already happened, and I’m having to steer her through it, and it’s frustrating, because I’m her mother, so she tends to listen to me less.

But the advisor reinforced it.

She needed that advisor.

You’re the parent, you’re automatically not as smart as she is.

Exactly.

I don’t think it’s like that. I think she’s the parent, therefore she’s biased. She might say “I think you are sufficiently capable to do this program” and she’ll say “Well, you’re my mother, of course you think that.”

“As a parent you’re going to be supportive always” type of ordeal… You’re not gonna tell it to them straight.

It’s so important for people to be sensitive to these issues…

And it makes me wonder if that’s why people are ending up in bootcamps, because they were unable to get the classes in college… I wonder how often this happens now.

Because somebody talked them out of it?

Let’s change subjects.

So on a positive note on this getting more people into stem and kids… The other night I saw a really awesome Verizon commercial. It went through LeBron James, and there’s some actors and models and stuff – basically, like “We don’t need more LeBron James, we don’t need more…”, and showing the statistics of the number of professional football players versus the number of pro basketball players, and just this little kid, and it was like “We need more of me!” and he’s doing like a LEGO Mindstorms thing or something, and it kind of rolls into how there’s four million unfilled tech jobs. We don’t need more celebrity actors and models and stuff, we need more tech people. I thought that was really cool.

I’m gonna have to look this commercial up. You should put it in the Slack channel.

Yeah, I’ll drop it in the Slack channel now, but it is actually in our doc. Copying link…

And now everybody’s gonna be listening to us live talk and listening to a commercial at the same time. [laughter]

Haha, awesome!

Don’t do it!

Should we give a moment of silence for everybody to listen?

Well, why don’t we take our next break right now, and that will be a perfect opportunity, Erik.

That is a ridiculously good idea. Too bad I didn’t think of it. And I have to give you credit. [laughter]

Yeah, because we all heard it.

Alright, so our second sponsor for today is DataDog.

Well, I mean now they’re making baby toys for programming concepts. Have you seen these things? They’re like infant toys, which is great! We think that we are smart now… Just wait. Our kids are gonna crush us.

Well, we might as well just consider ourselves back on the air, because I think there’s a real problem in that as we advance so much as a society, we are gaining such a tremendous amount of – what is the word…? A corpus of knowledge that we can’t possibly all know. So sure, the kids will know cooler things, but everybody still can’t know all the things. We will always be maybe really good at one or two specialized areas, or maybe a good specialist that knows a lot about a lot of things, but not everything about a lot of things, but that body of knowledge is growing so fast at this point, that I’m almost worried that at some point, if we had some large population event and lost a lot of people, we wouldn’t be able to continue as a society the way we are now, because nobody knows how to build that aircraft, or how to keep the power plant running, other than a very few specialized number of people.

Okay, confession… I watch How It’s Made, so that I can be that person that knows how… [laughter]

Now the truth is out… Such an awesome show!

So we need to live near you. Zombie apocalypse… Where’s Ashley?

Yeah, exactly! I know exactly how to make a coffee, but…

We’ve talked about this before too - I think that each generation we get further abstracted away from the things we use. I’ve mentioned this before… In the ’50s if you owned a TV, you knew how to change the vacuum tubes; you went to the store and you bought one. In the ’80s and probably early ‘90s if you owned a car, somebody in the household probably knew how to do some basic maintenance on it. But now it’s common for us to have all kinds of devices and things that we use every day that we know how to use but we don’t understand how they work. Ask non-tech people what Wi-Fi is and how it works… It’s just magic. It’s wireless. There’s no concept of radio–

It goes to space and back, right…? [laughter] Yeah…

To Brian’s point, Joe Rogan has a comedy bit where he talks about some of this stuff, and he’s like “How many smart people are in the room?” And he’s like, “No, I mean REALLY smart, not just use-stuff-made-by-smart-people… Like, how does your phone work?” [laughter]

I love him.

He’s just like “If you think you’re smart… If I took you and gave you a hatchet and dropped you off in the middle of the forest/jungle, how long till you can send me an email?” [laughter] And it goes to show – he’s like “What would happen, what do you do when the power goes out?” He’s like “I know I’d do I’d sit here twiddling my thumbs. Somebody’s probably working on it right now!” He’s like “What would happen if it never came back on, and we had to go back into the caves because the animals are coming in because there’s no lights and sounds and stuff?”

You don’t have a fridge. Stop and think about it for a second - you don’t have fridge.

Well, Brian and I would be safe.

Yeah, I’m good.

We know how to smoke meat. [laughter]

We have a lot of ammunition and a really big grill.

So that was the other thing he pointed out. He’s like “I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking “It’s alright, I’d be safe. I’ve got a gun.” He’s like “But what happens when you run out of bullets? Do you know how to make a bullet? I don’t know how to make a bullet.”

I know how to reload bullets… [laughter]

[43:48] So it’s just a really good point that despite you can look around and think you know about a lot of stuff, there’s always gonna be things you don’t know. There was a Survival(ish) show I watched a number of years ago where they put a programmer or electrician with a carpenter and a medic and they dropped them off, and it’s a post-apocalyptic kind of town…

That was a cool show.

Yeah, they had to invent stuff to try to survive for the week.

That’s rad! Why do they always cancel the cool stuff?

And then randomly they just eat one person at the end of each week… [laughter]

Sacrifice, I like it.

And they’d use dead pigs… They did something with it to break it down and turn it into a fuel for a tractor so that they could use that as a generator…

Bio-diesel.

Yeah… It’s just crazy.

I wanted to go back and ask Ashley… I didn’t catch up with the age of your kid/kids - I don’t even know if it’s more than one… But I wanted to ask if you’re teaching them how to code, and what you’re using, how that’s coming along…?

Yeah, so I have a 19-year-old, the one that’s in college… She is girl, and she is just now starting to come around to the idea of programming. I tried to teach her when she was about my son’s age, who’s 11, and she was having not part of it, and you can’t force somebody to learn it; it just doesn’t work.

My 11-year-old is very interested in it, and we started out with Scratch, and we’re moving into Python, and doing some Go as well… But he loves Scratch.

You gotta watch out, that Scratch is a gateway drug. The next thing you know, they’re doing Python, and before you know it, they’re snorting C++ in the backroom.

Yeah…

Why?! That makes no sense to me. No, really… Why? [laughter]

It was a bad joke, Carlisia… I apologize to all of the world for my bad joke.

Okay, it went over my head.

You should expect this from Brian…

I should…

I haven’t slept in a while.

But yeah, so it’s going well. It only goes well though if your kid’s interested in it. You can’t make them like it.

Yeah, and depending on the age, the attention span… My son loves when we do stuff, like work on RC cars or we mod them, and sometimes a little bit of electronic stuff, when we work on the Cupid thing for the smoker… But he only hangs out for so long. I try to get a breadboard together and have all the supplies around to do an FM radio on a breadboard, and he didn’t make it halfway through. He was like, “Can I go play…?”

Yeah… When Tilford was really little, we got him snap circuits.

Oh, those are so cute!

We have that still, yeah.

It was great.

So I actually just had my first success. My son just turned 15, and I’ve been gently encouraging him to learn programming since he was a baby, and he’s just always been “Yeah, that’s cool, that’s fun… Yet no, I’m not really interested. I’m gonna go play Minecraft or Overwatch” or whatever it is he’s playing these days… But then just this year - March, last month - he said “Hey, do you have any more of those Raspberry Pi’s lying around?”

Minecraft server! [laughs]

I said, “As a matter of fact, I have a couple of Raspberry Pi’s lying around. What do you need?” He said, “I was thinking about using a Raspberry Pi for Pi Day at school, to calculate pi, with Go. Do you think you could help me with that?” I’m like, “You know, I think I could. Yeah, that’d be fun.” I let him do all the work and pointed him in the right direction… Of course, he just cut and pasted somebody’s Calculate Pi In Go application, but he installed Go, he installed Linux on the Raspberry Pi… He did the whole thing. Then the compiled it, took it to school and got an A on his little project, so… Sometimes they just have to be ready.

[47:58] I think it’s kind of how Katrina Owen said in her talk - your need or want to succeed or finish a project has to outweigh your reasons for quitting. They really wanna play their games and things like that, but in that case he really wanted to complete that project, so he’s willing to persevere through any kind of struggle he has, because he wants to do that so bad. But when you’re just like “Would you like to learn this?” they’re like “Yeah, that sounds cool”, and then when they start to struggle and they realize it’s time, they’re like “Yeah…”

Yeah, that’s why we combined games and programming with the Scratch stuff. Also, we were building Minecraft servers with Raspberry Pi’s. That’s sort of where we started with this.

That’s awesome. So anybody wanna talk about any projects and news before we – I think some people have some hard stops.

Yeah, I think we do have some hard stops. There were several interesting things going on this month, absolutely.

One thing that I saw, speaking of Steve Francia, is the new Developer Experience Working Group.

Yeah, I think that’s more JBD than Steve, though.

I think so too, yeah.

I think he’s on the team now.

Maybe, but it’s JBD running the show. Don’t take away a woman’s credit and give it to a man, Erik. We’ll shoot you down. [laughter] We will shoot you down!

You’re trying to get me beat in the streets now.

Listen, we need him. We need him… It’s not time yet.

Okay, it’s not time yet. [laughs] That’s the most menacing thing anybody’s ever said on this show. [laughter] “It’s not time to kill him yet, Brian.”

It’s not time… I’ll just wait. [laughter]

For anybody who hasn’t seen it, there’s a blog post talking about the initial goals of the Working Group, to kind of understand the community’s use cases, and some of the stuff that we were talking about, like the struggle to get started, understanding tooling and things like that.

I don’t know – did they call for new members, or just participation from the community?

They did, yeah. They called for lots of participation and membership and activity.

There’s a mailing list and it’s been very active. There’s a lot going on there. I haven’t had time to read through it, but that’s definitely the place to go to catch up.

Did you guys put it in the Slack channel?

Do it…

Let’s do it!

Are you not looking at the doc, Ashley?

No… Oh, am I supposed to be looking at the doc…?

There’s a doc?

Oh, if I did all my own work…

No, you don’t have to look…

It’s okay. It’s just a guide… A suggestion.

Well, obviously, because I ignored it. I’m in the doc now, how about that?

I put the mailing list on Slack.

Alright, I have a complaint… I’m looking at this document about all these interesting Go projects and news, and there are two different Ruby implementations in Go this week?

I saw that!

What’s up with that? Why do we have to rewrite Ruby in Go?

No, it’s funny, because earlier in the week I saw one of them… One of you dropped it in our private channel, and I’m like “Why do we want this…?” And now there are two of them! [laughs] I’m like “Why?!”

So here’s how the story goes… I came across Rooby, which is like a Ruby the language-like language; it’s somebody’s own interpretation of the language, written in Go. And this is really cool, from the perspective similar to how we talked about writing compilers and interpreters and things like that in Go, so I thought that was really cool. And then I came across Go Ruby, which is an actual implementation of the real Ruby language in Go.

Yeah. Both really cool.

Speaking of that, I’m gonna bring this back full circle, because that’s how we do things here at GoTime FM. The book by Thorsten Ball that we talked about building the interpreter in Go - and that was a great conversation, I don’t remember what episode it was… In the 20s probably, it was so long ago; we’re up at what - 43 now? Time flies, I tell you what. So that book is the inspiration that Mark Bates used from episode 29, from live at the Dunkin’ Doughnuts in Boston - he used that book to create the new interpreter that powers Plush, which is the new template language that powers Go Buffalo, and Plush is a killer, killer template.

If you haven’t used Buffalo or Plus yet - because you can use Plush without Buffalo if you chose to… It is so much nicer in Go’s built-in template. So much nicer! Go do that. Use Plush.

So I just brought that whole thing full circle. Did you see how I did that?

That was very nice. Good job!

Thank you. Thank you so much.

Did anybody have any other projects to mention before we jump into #FreeSoftwareFriday? Or news…?

Well, I mean, Hugo’s latest release was kind of cool, with custom output formats…

Oh…! I wanna abuse that so badly! What do you wanna do with it? Tell me.

I don’t know yet, I don’t know. The options are endless, it seems, at this point…

I know, right?! I read the blog post and the first thing I thought was “How can I totally abuse this?” Because you create these documents, and you create a template and a custom output format, the next thing you know you’ve got an API server that’s feeding off of static markdown documents, right? I’m there.

Do you wanna do a project?

I do! Call me.

Let’s do a project! I’m calling you. [laughter]

I don’t know what to say. [laughter]

We’re gonna abuse Hugo this weekend while I’m grilling my pig.

Hey, we can bring it full circle there, too…

If we used it for something barbecue-related… There’s lots to be done for the live barbecue stuff.

Where even is the blog? I’m on the page and I don’t see a blog. You said you read the blog post?

Yeah, hang on a second, I’ll drop it in. Here you go…

Thank you.

Is this about sweet and nice silly?

I’m not kidding, I wanna abuse this so badly… There are so many crazy awesome things you can do with these new custom output formats

I know, it’s gonna be awesome. I asked Steve if he wanted me to say anything specific about that, and he said “Oh, there was a release?” [laughter] So he’s in full vacation mode right now. He’s on vacation.

Well, I think Bjørn Erik Pedersen has been the lead maintainer on Hugo for quite some time now.

Or bep, as he calls himself these days. We’ve got JBP, we’ve got bep… I’m going by BJK now. [laughter]

So I wanted to mention real quick… Caddy is launching officially on 20th April. There’s going to be a party somewhere in Utah… Just follow Matt Holt on Twitter to find out if you are in that area. He has really cute Caddy stickers, but we need to order them, because of course, it’s unfeasible for him to send everybody a sticker.

I ordered $25 worth if you need any.

Oh, I need one…

I would love to have one.

I couldn’t help myself. I love Caddy so much, I was like “Stickers?! Must have all of them!”

Yes, that is how I felt.

Two seconds after he tweeted that I ordered a ton.

[55:59] Send me one.

I figured the stickers were probably relatively cheap, and any extra money was going towards Caddy, so it was a good investment.

Exactly. Yeah, he works so hard on that.

So yes, I’ll share my stickers. I’m happy to.

Yes, nice!

I don’t have to wait, I just have to drive around the corner. [laughter] “I’m here for the stickers!”

“Your stickers are here, Erik!”

Rub it in.

Alright, #FreeSoftwareFriday. Let’s move on.

Hey, you get to drive to Zed Shaw’s house, so…

Yeah, okay… Okay, I still win. I knew that deep inside, I was just trying to help, though…

Wait, are you saying that Zed Shaw is better than me? Now I’m feeling inadequate.

You know, I didn’t wanna say it out loud, but…

I’m done with this show.

You brought this on yourself… Awkward silence! [laughs]

Yeah, the world is still. Everybody wonders how serious they are.

Because we mentioned Zed again too though, his stuff is really cool from the perspective – I like when he goes and shows you how to break stuff, and then kind of tells you how to fix it so you notice the breaking. That’s one of my favorite things about the way he teaches stuff. Because usually it doesn’t work the way somebody says in their blog post or video. You’re like “This is broken, and I don’t understand why!”

Yeah, the first thing that he had me do when I showed up at his house is he brought out these giant post-its and he said “Map out what you want. Map it out”, and I was like “What do you mean?” “Just draw it out!” It took me forever… A solid three hours to map out basically an anti-social media app. I had no idea what I was doing, but it was so helpful, and I still do it now… Just drawing it out. I never would have known if I didn’t go to Zed’s house.

That’s awesome.

See, that’s mentoring.

It’s funny, because when you were saying people have trouble knowing where to start, I didn’t have a chance to jump in and say what I was thinking… What I was thinking was you start at the end. You find out what it is that you want, you break it down and then you start researching how you get that done.

So I thought that was a really good tip that he gave for you, to start with what it is that you wanted to do.

I loved that.

Alright, so #FreeSoftwareFriday.

Let’s do it.

You ready?

I’m ready.

Alright, who wants to go first?

I’ll go first. I’ve got a good one this week.

I would like to thank one of my favorite open source contributors, Erik St. Martin, who this week put together some of my other favorite open source pieces, like Grafana and Influx and Telegraf and Mosquitto and Gobot and MQTT, and built the most gorgeous dashboard ever for our barbecue project. It’s awesome.

That’s really pretty…

It’s awesome. It’s live. If you wanna see it now, you can go to http://barbecue.live and you can see it. Because I’m grilling right now, and you can see it live on the internet. I was livestreaming YouTube too, but I had to shut it off because of this stupid phone/Skype disaster because of my MacBook, but don’t get me started with that.

I’ve gotta correct the link though, for anybody listening live… We’ll drop a link directly to the dashboard, because there’s just like a placeholder with a barbecue gopher on it on the main page. You have to know the secret URL to get to the dashboards for Brian’s grill.

…to get to Brian’s barbecue. I’ve got the link right here, I’ll put it in Slack.

Alright, how about you, Carlisia?

I found this really neat (I think it’s neat) project called All Contributors. It’s a way to recognize contributors to your project that makes it very visible. On their own page you can see an example down at the bottom. It gives you a grid with the photo or avatar of each one of the contributors. That was really neat. They have a spec you need to follow to be able to display it on your homepage.

[01:00:06.24] Oh, that’s really cool.

Neat, isn’t it?

Nice, I hadn’t seen this before. And how about you, Ashley?

Oh, I did mine early… You know how you said “Are you looking at the doc?” and I said “Yes” and then I closed it… [laughter] So yeah, mine was Hugo, I was really excited about that.

Hugo is so awesome.

Yeah. Can you guys hear my dog breathing into the mic? [laughter]

No… So mine for this week - and I won’t be upset for Brian taking away all of my stuff early, because he gave me a shoutout, so how can you be mad? - is actually to Grafana, InfluxDB and Mosquitto, because it was ridiculously cool in an evening what can get thrown together with zero lines of code written. Basically, you’re able to just take a Mosquitto instance, which is MQTT, which is like a message brokering thing , Brian’s Cupid project just blasts metrics at Mosquitto, then Telegraf, which is also written by Influx Data, just has a configuration for an MQTT consumer that reads that data in a certain JSON format and pumps it in as InfluxDB metrics, and then Grafana just reads that. So I was able to just kind of install those things and configure some stuff, and zero lines of code were harmed in this experiment.

Crazy…

Yeah, it’s amazing that you can build what seems like a full-fledged app with writing zero code, right?

Yeah, that’s insanity.

Well, it totally made my day this morning, too. I woke up and Erik’s like, “Hey, got a second to look at this link?” I was like “Sure.” He pulls up this link, and it’s my barbecue with all of the stats on it; I was blown away. I was like, “How awesome is this!?” It was so exciting. It has been one of the better days I’ve had in years, because of all of the awesome barbecueness.

You should try sleep, it’s good for you out here.

I’ve heard sleep is pretty good, but I wouldn’t know.

I have to accept blame in that, because I knew he was tired this morning, and he literally had said “I’m gonna take a nap” and I’m like “No, wait! I’ve gotta show you this thing!” [laughter]

I blame Erik for the campy lack of sleep in my life.

[laughs] “Don’t go! You must see this!” [laughter]

Casey says, “Wait, did he come over and light barbecue to start gathering data?”

No, actually I knew that he was going to be cooking something this morning, and I knew that last night we had kind of negotiated what the MQTT topics would look like, so last night I whipped together something so that when he started his smoker this morning he could see graphs.

That was the last thing I said before I went to bed - “I’m gonna send this stuff to MQTT. We’ll graph it tomorrow, or sometime.” And then I get out of bed this morning and the graph is already there because Erik is awesome.

You guys know it was on the same call that you guys used to match your outfits, so what are you wearing tomorrow? [laughter]

I’m wearing my GoTime shirt. What are you wearing?

I’m actually wearing my Denver Gophers shirt. That finally came.

Nice! Who drew that gopher?

I don’t know… [laughter] So that was more artwork by Ashley that’s just awesome. I love that little Denver gopher.

It’s awesome, isn’t it?

It’s for a great cause, too. I’ll have to put the link in Slack… I ordered that shirt weeks ago and I still haven’t gotten it.

I’ve got mine, Erik got his…

I wonder if it got lost…

Maybe they just had to source sizes, or something like that…

Possible.

But that’s the only difference that I can think of, aside from distanced for delivery, but I think enough time has passed to account for that.

Yeah, shoutout to Denver gophers.

We heart Denver gophers here a lot. We couldn’t have GopherCon without them.

Three months away, I cannot believe it. Three months and we’re all gonna be in Denver.

[01:04:08.29] Yeah, it’s gonna be awesome.

So much awesome! Which reminds me, it’s time to start practicing for the GopherCon band.

Oh, is this a real thing?

Erik thinks I’m kidding, but I’ve already worked out with our welcome party people - we’ve got a corner, we’ve got live music set up, and there will be a GopherCon band, dammit!

I know better than to think you’re kidding. [laughter]

My reputation precedes me.

I’m going to live-tweet about this.

So I know that we have a hard stop for the recorded show… Adam is probably waiting patiently to stop recording before we corrupt all of his data…

He’s twitching. Adam twitches.

So with that, I wanna thank everybody for being on the show, especially thank you to Ashley for all the great things that you do for the community, and for coming on our lowly show, for lowering your standards.

Thank you for having me.

Huge shoutout to our sponsors for today’s episode, Toptal and DataDog. Please share this show with fellow Go programmers. An easy way to subscribe is by going to GoTime.fm. We are on Twitter. If you have suggestions for topics or people - or the people is you - that want to be on the show, you can ping us. With that, goodbye everybody. We’ll see you next week.

This was great, bye!

Thanks for being on the show, Ashley.

Thanks, Brian!

Changelog

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