> which is interesting given most providers are writing new infrastructure code largely in Go
I'm not sure this is true. There's a lot of Java around, Scala is pretty popular too, in many industries C/C++ are the norm still for this sort of code.
Go might be the trend in open source infrastructure projects right now, but a significant amount of that is likely to be inertia from Docker and Kubernetes.
I'm not sure this is true. There's a lot of Java around, Scala is pretty popular too, in many industries C/C++ are the norm still for this sort of code.
Go might be the trend in open source infrastructure projects right now, but a significant amount of that is likely to be inertia from Docker and Kubernetes.