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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Rob_PikeRob Pike - Wikipedia

    Robert Pike (born 1956) is a Canadian programmer and author. He is best known for his work on the Go programming language while working at Google and the Plan 9 operating system while working at Bell Labs, where he was a member of the Unix team. Pike wrote the first window system for Unix in 1981.

  2. Feb 4, 2024 · Original Go co-designer Rob Pike gave a talk commemorating the 14th anniversary of the day the Go programming language launched with a talk looking back on “what we got right, and what we got wrong.”

  3. Professional dillettante. robpike has 21 repositories available. Follow their code on GitHub.

  4. Aug 15, 2012 · Rob Pike, now a Distinguished Engineer at Google, worked at Bell Labs as a member of the Unix Team and co-created Plan 9 and Inferno. He was central to the creation of the Go and Limbo programming languages. Rob shares an experience at Bell Labs that changed his approach to debugging.

  5. May 6, 2020 · We spoke to Rob Pike, the co-author of the Go programming language, about a career spanning four decades, the evolution of Go over the last ten years, and into the future. Read the interview

  6. Feb 23, 2024 · At the closing talk of GopherConAU 2023, Rob Pike, one of the original creators of Go, shared a retrospective on the 14-year journey of the Go programming language.

  7. Abstract. (This is a modified version of the keynote talk given by Rob Pike at the SPLASH 2012 conference in Tucson, Arizona, on October 25, 2012.) The Go programming language was conceived in late 2007 as an answer to some of the problems we were seeing developing software infrastructure at Google.

  8. Jan 4, 2024 · About Rob Pike: Rob is a co-creator of the Go language (with Ken Thompson and Robert Greisemer). At Bell Labs he was involved in the creation of the Plan 9 from Bell Labs and...

  9. Feb 25, 2011 · Rob Pike discusses Google Go: OOP programming without classes, Go interfaces, Concurrency with Goroutines and Channels, and the Go features that help keep GC pauses short.

  10. Rob Pike talks about why we need Go and how it is a next-generation language for today's modern computer environment.