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submitted 1 month ago by Owl@hexbear.net to c/technology@hexbear.net

bear-despair

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[-] veniasilente@lemm.ee 15 points 1 month ago

I tried Gemini once, honestly found Gopher to be noticeably superior, and on several fronts.

Gemini feels like someone was throwing a tantrum at the modern web and decided to overcompensate by rolling progress back like 45 years to Web 0.0001255 Standards.

[-] AernaLingus@hexbear.net 8 points 1 month ago

How so? I'm going to tinker with both regardless, but I'm curious to know what you found lacking with Gemini so that I can evaluate it with a more critical eye.

[-] veniasilente@lemm.ee 14 points 1 month ago

Mostly that even for something three decades newer, it does nothing with the newness except bad things: it doesn't allow for more than one (1) link per paragraph, if at all. Doesn't have a concept of text alignment, text weight, spacing, italics, underline or any of the other stuff CSS 0.1 inherited from the historical printing press. To my recollection, doesn't even allow you to use any alphabet set that is not English's one (so stuff like math equations are out of the question), and you can't post a link that has international characters (like the wikipedia page for "Ñandú") without hideously percent-escaping them. In 2024.

In exchange, Gemini seems to require SSL and a certificate of all things, which means it's a lot costlier to implement on low-end hardware and it's noticeably vulnerable to tactics like domain seizure because you need a valid cert which means you need an external "naming authority".

Looking at it from a distance, it feels like someone looked a Gopher and went "I wonder how would this feel in the format of a brutalist buttplug".

On the plus side tho, thanks to the lack of anything even resembling formatting, Gemini does realize one thing that I don't recall Gopher realizing in full: rendering of the document is under control of the viewer, not of the author. For good or bad.

[-] Zvyozdochka@hexbear.net 11 points 1 month ago

Another thing I like about Gopher is that it was designed essentially to be a mounted read-only networked filesystem. Works well with the whole UNIX philosophy of "everything is a file".

[-] veniasilente@lemm.ee 4 points 1 month ago

Oh I didn't recall that part, might have to relearn some things of Ye Olde Gooden Times, but if so, that's wonderful!

~~Perhaps there is something like mount.gopher in the AUR already....?~~

[-] Zvyozdochka@hexbear.net 3 points 1 month ago

I'm not sure about the Linux world, a quick search reveals https://github.com/ewe2/gopherfs which seems like it'd do the trick.

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this post was submitted on 04 Oct 2024
185 points (98.4% liked)

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