Unfortunately, what he talks about is some yet another scripting language, not a system, close-to-hardware-level programming language.
Go is just a C 2.0 developed by its fathers and it's based on early works on Plan 9 project (if I understands correctly).
So, it is language for OS-level programming and, perhaps, google's own native client, and community will code and release lots of high-level libraries, as it happened for C or, say, perl.
Go is just a C 2.0 developed by its fathers and it's based on early works on Plan 9 project (if I understands correctly).
So, it is language for OS-level programming and, perhaps, google's own native client, and community will code and release lots of high-level libraries, as it happened for C or, say, perl.