> That's going to be a large albatross around Go's neck, as it has been around node.js', and Rails before that. Large amounts of developers flocking to a new thing because "this is the thing to use now and if you don't you're dead meat".
TJ's blog post is basically like if DHH ditched Ruby/Rails for Go.
> Personally, I thought Node.js was a terrible platform for serving dynamic web sites. It is, however, a great platform if you need to make a reasonably performant general server with minimal effort (such as a message broker for example).
Totally agree with you,nodejs is not a silver bullet.
TJ's blog post is basically like if DHH ditched Ruby/Rails for Go.
> Personally, I thought Node.js was a terrible platform for serving dynamic web sites. It is, however, a great platform if you need to make a reasonably performant general server with minimal effort (such as a message broker for example).
Totally agree with you,nodejs is not a silver bullet.