Yes I liked it even if the title was a little misleading, there isn't really a conclusion other than optimising problems is fun and the language doesn't matter too much as long as it doesn't actively get in the way. Certainly between Java and Go on performance there is no clear winner and if anything Java at the moment probably still wins (though with all the baggage of the JVM meaning Go wins easy deploys).
I thought this was a fun story, though it's a somewhat familiar one - the two languages don't have any fundamental difference in performance, and you can write very similar code in both.
This was a great read, thank you!
Yes I liked it even if the title was a little misleading, there isn't really a conclusion other than optimising problems is fun and the language doesn't matter too much as long as it doesn't actively get in the way. Certainly between Java and Go on performance there is no clear winner and if anything Java at the moment probably still wins (though with all the baggage of the JVM meaning Go wins easy deploys).
I thought this was a fun story, though it's a somewhat familiar one - the two languages don't have any fundamental difference in performance, and you can write very similar code in both.