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I take a look on Dart, which used by Flutter, a "React Native inspired" framework.
Very similar to Typescript and Java, so whatever you write, probably gonna work.
But I feel lack confidence on any language Google promoted. Eg kotlin and Go
🤦‍♂️
Google hired too many PhDs who have nothing to do, so they spend 1 day per week draw some doodles...
Hope this is not another weekend warrior project.🙄

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  • 0
    @aki237 nothing wrong with it.
    But just like Edge, nobody use it
  • 0
    @aki237 you can't even search it from indeed 🤦‍♂️
  • 1
    @sunfishcc just some examples: 500px, Basecamp, BBC, Bitly, Canonical, Clever, CloudFlare, CoreOS, DigitalOcean, Digg, Docker, DropBox, Facebook, GitLab, Hailo, IBM, InfluxData, Iron.io, Intel, JustWatch, Lyft, Medium, Minio, Mozilla, NY Times, OpenDoor, SendGrid, SourceGraph, SpaceMonkey, StackExchange, Twitch.
    Nobody?
  • 0
    @aki237 I might be wrong, but it's one of the largest online job search site.
  • 0
    @iNeed28hPerDay yes, you're right. But they also use another tools. Eg Tiwtch also uses React.js. Facebook almost uses everything. I can't see Go becomes a major player in their company.
    That's what I said, these weekend warrior type of projects.
  • 0
    @sunfishcc https://blog.twitch.tv/gos-march-to...
    Twitch uses it for the most important part of their system. So I don't know how that is a weekend project. Heroku's backend is fully built on it. The YouTube backend is built on golang etc. Do you actually have any arguments except just saying it's for weekend projects?
  • 4
    Golang is very popular... And Kotlin really has nothing to do with Google. It's developed by jetbrains, it just happens to be supported on Android now.
  • 0
    @iNeed28hPerDay I checked their requirements for backend developer, Go is one, but also C++, Python, Ruby, Java, scala.
    Twitter used to use Ruby, now the only requirements are Python and node.js
    The truth is if you can work for a big company from the start, they don't require you to know it, they will train you.
    If not, good luck on learning it, gain commercial experience and find a job to use it.
    I said I have no problem with it, it just not worth my time.
  • 0
    @ryanmhoffman I think I said promoted, rather than designed 😒
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