Hello Alex,
can you share your website so that I can take a look at it?
Why I Still Choose Go After All These Years
9 Comments
@[Unni Mana] yo unni,
for sure! check out my github where all my dev activity and projects are: https://github.com/alexvoste
and if you're curious about forgezero, which my latest post is about, the main repo is here: https://github.com/forgezero-cli/forgezero
also, you can find more about me and my work on my personal terminal-like site: https://alexvoste.meshoff.workers.dev
hmu if you got more questions. thanks for the interest!
Please log in to add a comment.
@[Mehadi Hasan] Yo Mehadi, thanks man! Glad you vibed with it. You hit the nail on the head – that weird mix of 'boring' simplicity and raw power, plus their kickass concurrency model, that's exactly why Go is still my go-to for solid backend work. It just ages like fine wine. Appreciate the awesome summary, seriously
Please log in to add a comment.
@[near] Hey near! Damn, thanks for the killer feedback, man! Really appreciate you digging the breakdown. It's truly that brutal combo of straightforward simplicity, rock-solid performance, and tooling that just 'works' without any drama, that keeps Go relevant for years. Especially for us in systems and backend development, where reliability isn't a suggestion, it's a must. Cheers for hitting those key points
Please log in to add a comment.
Interesting read.
I’ve worked with several backend technologies over the years, and I eventually came to a similar conclusion: choosing a language is often about understanding where it shines rather than chasing trends.
This idea is actually what pushed me to build the core of XyPriss in Go while keeping the developer experience in TypeScript. Go handles the performance-critical parts, while TypeScript keeps application development productive and familiar. The goal was to combine the strengths of both worlds rather than forcing developers to choose one over the other.
For those unfamiliar with XyPriss, it's a security-first hybrid web framework powered by a native Go core and a TypeScript application layer.
@[iDevo] Hey man, thanks for sharing that. Seriously, your approach with Go + TypeScript hybrid — that's actually a really smart way to do it. Respect.
I totally agree: language is just a tool. What matters is who's holding it and how well it fits the job. You're not forcing everyone into one box — you're combining strengths. That's the right mindset.
And yeah, Go can build solid stuff if you know what you're doing. But so can other languages. It's about picking what works for you and enjoying the work.
Anyway, cool project — I'll check out XyPriss. Thanks for stopping by.
Please log in to add a comment.
What stood out to me is that your argument for Go isn't really about performance.
It's about maintainability.
A lot of developers compare languages based on benchmarks, but most projects spend far more time being maintained than being written.
The line about understanding a codebase within days versus fighting language complexity really resonated with me.
In the AI era, I think readability and maintainability are becoming even bigger advantages because generated code is easy.
Maintaining it a year later is the hard part.
Please log in to add a comment.
Please log in to comment on this post.
More Posts
- © 2026 Coder Legion
- Feedback / Bug
- Privacy
- About Us
- Contacts
- Premium Subscription
- Terms of Service
- Refund
- Early Builders
Performance overhead is my personal enemy.
C | Go | x86_64 Asm (3 dialects)
More From alexvoste
Related Jobs
- Aftersales - Technical support engineer - Europe (A12018)XPENG · Full time · Netherlands
- Aftersales Technical Trainer - EU (A222400)XPENG · Full time · Netherlands
- Installation TechnicianDynamics ATS · Full time · Croatia
Commenters (This Week)
Contribute meaningful comments to climb the leaderboard and earn badges!