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NateDad | 6 years ago

This is just not true. 2.5 years ago when I was looking for a remote-only go job, I had so many positions to look at, I had to put them in a spreadsheet. None of them were in silicon valley .

Many many places are using go here and there. From start ups to big enterprises.

It's rarely all they do, but it's pretty common to have some backend in go.

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the_mitsuhiko|6 years ago

I mean, sure, Go is also used elsewhere but it's at least at the moment still tiny in comparison with other languages.

hu3|6 years ago

Other than my own experience, I've seen some data that led me to believe that Go is more pervasive than I previously perceived:

    Go started out with a share of 8% in 2017 and now it has reached 18%.
    In addition, the biggest number of developers (13%) chose
    Go as a language they would like to adopt or migrate to.
https://www.jetbrains.com/lp/devecosystem-2019/

Regardless of variance, I wouldn't call 18% tiny. Specially given the trend:

https://jaxenter.com/go-number-one-for-2019-hackerrank-repor...