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       Gemini first impressions
       July 29th, 2019
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       I finally spent the 5 minutes necessary to download one of the few
       available Gemini clients. I went with AV-98 [0] from solderpunk.
       It's interface is basically the same as VF-1, so it had that going
       for it. Also, I didn't need to download a rust compiler. ;)
       
 (HTM) [0] AV-98
       
       While there's not a lot of content around gemini-space (more on
       this in a second), it was still nice to have a way in to poke
       around. I see some journal activity already taking shape, and
       that's a great place to start.
       
       I'll be honest. At first I thought of Gemini as a neat but
       ultimately useless side project of the already-tiny gopher
       community. The more I've seen it worked on and thought about it
       the more I've come to consider it a "real thing" of some
       importance. But lets come back to that idea in a minute.
       
       First, lets talk about the naming of things.
       
       "Gemini" is the protocol. It appears to be capitalized in all
       occurences within solderpunk's FAQ. 
       
       "Gemini maps" are the temporary term for the document format of
       a Gemini server. It's coined by solderpunk here [1] and only named
       that "until a better name comes along."
       
 (TXT) [1] Gemini maps
       
       "Geminiholes" - mentioned by solderpunk, but noone is using it.
       
       "Gemini server/client" are the defacto name for individual tools
       that power it.
       
       "Gemini-verse / Gemini-sphere / Gemini ecosystem" - I haven't
       noted any special term for this akin to "the web" or
       "gopherspace". Is there something already in use?
       
       "Journal" - weB LOG / goPHer LOG like structure. Is there
       a playful term for these yet?
       
       What other terms are we missing?
       
       Okay, enough of that. Time for THOUGHTS OF IMPORTANCE!
       
       The built-in TLS by design of Gemini is great, and combined with
       the natural ability to run it unpriviliged and require very little
       bandwidth I can see it serving a valuable purpose in safely
       providing a platform for authors in situations where the web is
       not. Take Khazikstan, for instance, who is MITMing the entire
       country. Gopher was always a nice idea to help in these
       situations, but the lack of reliable security on it meant major
       problems for real applications. Gemini fixes that. What's more,
       Gemini over tor adds in anonymity.
       
       I have more thoughts on the tor thing, and around real-world
       applications for a minimalist hyperlinkable publishing protocol
       with built in anonymity and safety, but my internet connection is
       dying and I have to finish this post while tethered to my phone.
       Thank goodness for low bandwidth stuff like gopher and Gemini,
       right?
       
       In the meantime, what are your thoughts on using Gemini (one day)
       in a setting that's not just hobby play?