For those, who do not know what the Gemini protocol is, think of it as a modern, light-weight HTTP alternative without CSS or JavaScript. In layman term, you could see it as Web 1.0 reinvented. It uses GemText instead of HTML. For folks who want to try it out, you can either install a Gemini extension for your HTTPs browser (which kinda defeats the purpose, as modern browsers are heavy), or download a dedicated Gemini browser like Lagrange. Here’s a few sites you can access in Gemini.
Personally, I love it, although I miss a few stuff, like for example, multimedia, streaming and stuff like that. The memory foorprint is very low, and pages are super-fast.
I understand the sentiment, but… HTML and some light CSS is just as fast and much more accessible. It just strikes me as something that defines itself in opposition to “thing everyone uses” for no good reason.
It may not be particularly useful, but I welcome a challenge to the current status quo. The Internet is a powerful resource, and we’re still building on top of the first protocol that worked back in 1991 to navigate it. Gemini isn’t something I could see having any mainstream appeal, but it’s absolutely worth experimenting with alternatives to the World Wide Web. Having more than one functional open standard could help revolutionize the Internet in novel new ways.
I like it. Everyone these days seems to want web pages that are 5MB of dynamically generated junk.
My little website is just static hugo-generated stuff.
Sure, but you don’t need a completely new protocol to speed up websites, learn HTML and CSS and you can easily create fast pages for anyone to look at, not just those with a highly specific client.
People tend to really suck at limiting themselves. If you’re wandering around in gemini space you’re not going to run into pages with lots of ad banners, trackers and other monetization BS. You pretty much can’t. On the web, you can run into simple fast pages but it’s getting less and less the norm. And the lack of easy ways to monetize means it’s unattractive to corporations, which helps avoid creeping enshittification.
Gemini is light, simple, and easy to parse. It’s just lightly marked up text. Compare the size of Lagrange with the size of Chrome or Firefox. And nobody is forcing you to use it. 🙂
Ads are the main reason for all the junk though.
i use firefox with ubo and most websites are really fast this way.
What is the point of a competing standard to html/https? It works pretty well? And CSS and JS are a big part of modern websites (sometimes a bit too big of course, but still).
Https is lightweight too, if you just don’t add tons of CSS and JS dependencies?
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Why?
What problem does this solve over simple HTML/CSS pages?
Outside of a very specific niche I can’t see how anyone would choose this over normal HTML and HTTP/HTTPS, you’d need to run a new Gemini specific server to host Gemini specific files, created by Gemini specific softwares or Gemini specific developers, files that can only be read with a Gemini specific client.
This won’t happen outside systems with highly specialized requirenments.
The advantage is that it’s an obligate web 1.0 (-ish) experience. You aren’t clicking a link on a Gemini site that is going to take you anywhere crazy. There’s no tracking pixels and embedded content to get in the way.
It’s possible to attempt this by just following web 1.0 standards on your w3 site, and only linking to sites that do the same, and so on, but eventually there’s going to be a like button or an embedded video or something that ruins the experience. The web is messy.
Smaller spaces with constraints can be a lot of fun. Working within those constraints can breed innovation.
There’s no tracking pixels and embedded content to get in the way.
Looking at the Gemini docs, I feel like I can recreate a way to add tracking and embed content. I could be wrong. But it looks possible.
And if that is the case, once marketers see the potential, all the tracking, popups and gated content we all love so much can happen on Gemini.
Possible only if you add that functionality to Gemtext, but currently not something you can do with existing clients. It’s pretty much just modern Gopher.
combine with tor(orbot)
Sure, but untill web browsers support the protocol natively, it will never take off
This completely misses the point.
Why would you not want a broader adoption of the system?
CSS and js are nothing to do with http. In fact neither is html really.
It’s just a protocol for transferring text.
I was an early adopter of Gemini and even hosted some stuff on there years ago, but ultimately I don’t see a point when things like gopher exist and Gemini is a wasteland when it comes to interesting stuff to browse. Though admittedly the concept of an encrypted gopher protocol is pretty nice to me. I feel a lot more of the old internet feeling on there, i.e everyone else using it is a like-minded hobbyist with no corporate overlords. But even then things like activitypub that we are using right now also have that so idk.
Web 1.0 is beginning to seem like a golden age, isn’t it?
Always was. Gifs and music and shitty looking web pages were the shit. RIP
When there were waaay more personal websites than corporate ones 🥲
Morning to do with the technology though, companies just realised there was money in it
Hypnospace Outlaw made me realize we missed out on something special.
It’s fine, I use Lagrange to read it sometimes, and there’s a few gemlogs I follow. But it’s in a weird space of “almost HTML, so why not just do HTML?”
Gopher still works fine, and has more clients (I still use Lynx). I like the clean separation of menus (even if you use a lot of
i
info lines) and documents. There’s a bunch of gopher holes still out here. I haven’t updated mine in a couple years, but when/if I move it over to a new server I will, as kind of a back-channel to the site & blog.Oooh I didn’t know about this! Does it have a search engine?
EDIT: oh I see there is! Shoulda clicked through before asking lol
Another one of those “solution in search of a problem” things. It really doesn’t solve any of the drawbacks of HTML/CSS, it just does the same thing in a different (way less supported) way.
I got super into it for a while but there just isn’t enough “killer sites” to keep it interesting.
It really is just a little too minimalist. It’s not really easily possible to do forums etc.
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You can use server-side forms to update pages, just like we did before front-end HTML became Flash 2.0.
Not possible. The Gemini protocol lacks anything like a POST method. The only way to provide user input to a Gemini server is through arguments encoded in the URL.
Cause it’s so good to reload the whole webpage just to send a form
That only became a problem with giant ball of crap WWW sites. A <10KiB page is fine.
Guestbook anyone?
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Here’s a microblog service that’s built on Gemini that uses forms to get data from users. gemini://station.martinrue.com/
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It is open source! https://github.com/skyjake/lagrange
this sounds like the name of an ARG
I like browsing it! You always find interesting people and writings about a wide variety of topics. It’s got enough users to have variety but not so many that it feels in any way corporate. It’s very much in line with the idea that limitations breed creativity. I’d highly recommend everyone download a decent browser and look around it a bit.
My only worry is that the Google Gemini AI thing will quickly suck all the air out of that name.