Paulo, I'm very sorry if my question looks a bit rude. The only goal I had is to understand if your opinion is theoretical or based on the real experience.
I don't share your opinion on Go syntax, although, I like Pascal family much more than C and had been using Pascal/Delphi almost exclusively for all my projects until 2003. After that, Delphi became too outdated and I had to switch to other languages.
Also, as I have said before, my knowledge about Oberon and Component Pascal is theoretical, so it might be that you're actually right. Given that these languages are effectively dead (by github criteria: it does not recognize Oberon or Component Pascal, but supports DCPU16 assembly), I don't have a chance to improve this situation (any program written on dead language is theoretical, because it would not be used in prod)
I did contribute the initial version of the os.user package for Windows, which was then picked up by the core team. Also started to add Windows to the exp.gui/draw packages, but gave up on them when they were dropped from Go 1.
I find github criteria a bad one, as many people I know don't even care about it.
I still lurk in the Go mailing list as a language geek, but lost interest, as the language feels too minimalist to my taste, given my experience with other languages.
In a way I belong to the group Rob recently described as C++ programmers. Given my experience in language design, using Go makes me feel I am back in high school with Turbo Pascal 6.0.
But Google's weight might nevertheless help Go become mainstream, who knows.
Do you want to have the ticket numbers and Mercurial branches information?