Show that the Stone–Čech compactification $\beta \mathbb{Z}$ is not metrizable (here $\mathbb{Z}$ denotes the set of integer numbers in discrete topology).
Definition. Let $X$ be a completely regular space. We say $\beta (X)$ is a *Stone–Čech compactification * of $X$ if it is a compactification of $X$ such that any continuous map $f:X\rightarrow C$ of $X$ into a compact Hausdorff space $C$ extends uniquely to a continuous map $g:\beta (X)\rightarrow C$.
We also have a theorem that states if $X$ is metrizable, then $X$ is first countable. So, if we show that $\beta (\mathbb{Z}) $ is not first countable, then we have our conclusion.
I've looked online for proofs of this fact and can't seem to find any.