[IN-PERSON] September Golang meetup

![[IN-PERSON] September Golang meetup](https://secure.meetupstatic.com/photos/event/2/f/4/2/highres_472632098.webp?w=750)
Details
Hello Gophers,
If you'd like to give a talk - submit your proposals here: http://goo.gl/forms/54YvJT223F
If you'd like to suggest topics for the fishbowl session - submit your topic here: http://tiny.cc/go-berlin-fishbowl
If you have more ideas - talk to us at the Gophers slack: https://gophersinvite.herokuapp.com/ in the #berlin channel, and follow us on twitter: https://twitter.com/gdgberlingolang
AGENDA
19:00-19:25 Networking over drinks and pizza
19:25-19:30 Welcome words
19:30-20:00 Programming Guitar Music / Timur Iskhakov
In this talk, we will learn
- how computers store sound,
- explore algorithms for synthesizing guitar string sound
and perform a cover of Johnny Cash's Hurt — in a geeky way.
We won't use any pre-recorded samples, sequencers, or — heaven forbid — actual guitars.
Instead, we will employ a little bit of math, Go, and a few helper libraries for audio processing.
20:00-20:30 Announcements, HR lost & found, break
20:30-21:00 Real-world game development with Ebitengine - How to make the best-selling Go game / Daigo Sato
In this talk, the games made by Odencat will be showcased, and it'll be explained how the studio has grown with Ebitengine. You'll learn a hint to creating a successful game library and the strategy to build a game studio from scratch.
21:00-end Networking
ABOUT OUR SPEAKERS
Timur Iskhakov / Futurice
Timur is a software developer at Futurice.
He likes exploring approaches that help build more efficient software
and programming for fun.
Daigo Sato (@daigo) / Odencat Inc.
Daigo worked in the game industry over ten years and started his own company Odencat Inc. in Tokyo, Japan. He is a super early user of Ebitengine (a simple 2D game library for Go) and created the first commercial game written in Go - Bear's Restaurant - on Nintendo Switch.
🤓ABOUT SumUp 🤓
SumUp is a mobile point-of-sale company that enables small businesses across the world to accept card payments. We build our own payment solution end-to-end so that we can always offer the best value and service to our merchants.
We use Go, Ruby, Node.js, Erlang & Elixir to implement software services that power the SumUp platform. In addition to our original hardware, mobile and web apps we have gone on to develop a suite of APIs and SDKs to integrate SumUp payment solution into other apps and services.
Cheers,
The Organizers™
COVID-19 safety measures

[IN-PERSON] September Golang meetup