I was watching a Distrotube video[0] today about Gemini. I have long been a hesitant adopter of new tech, be they software, games, hardware, etc. I sadly find with increasing regularity that new technology is buggy or half-baked, the wonders of a profits-over-people capitalist society that stresses deadlines and advertising attractiveness over functionality. Anyway, I downloaded bombadillo[1] and was not too impressed. No offense intended to the developer, but I'm just used to Lynx and entering into the vim command mode just to follow a link is tedious. ":1" is slower than "1". It just is. I don't think it's horrible, but the real downer was trying to find a Gemini space. Bombadillo is a combo Gopher/Gemini browser, but whenever I tried to visit a gemini:// URL, it spit out an error. Not good. The video I referenced is 2 whole years old. The DT URL is defunct. It doesn't work. It's dead. One thing I simultaneously understand but can't stand is quick adoption and just as quick abandonment, especially with front-facing things like internet sites. Ubuntu isn't for you? Fine, install a different OS. Gopher/Gemini isn't for you? You don't have to update them, but don't be an asshole and delete advertised spaces. I mean I can understand if a website from 1996 isn't around in 2010. I get it, especially if it's on its own domain, but cases like DT are just annoying because the fucktard still has a web presence. I guess the massive bandwidth demands of hosting either Gopher or Gemini was too much /sarcasm. The asshole has FOUR, count them, FOUR videos with Gemini in the title[2]! And he couldn't be bothered to keep his Gemini site up for TWO years. On a tangent, I was perusing the SDF users directory[3] and came across a "new" protocol idea called Innova[4]. I'm not sure whether this is another troll job or just an ill-informed venture that never took off. My initial guess is the latter, but I wouldn't be surprised if it's the former. It's basically just an offline internet, with no updates besides the first time you log in? The idea falls apart immediately once you start thinking about it. I'm guessing this was some kid trying to make something that was just a non-starter. No hate, I'm all for new ideas and improvements, but at the same time, I think the Internet has enough protocols. This brings me back to Gemini. I've said it before: Gemini is a compromise ironically adding needless complexity to an already-crowded Internet that half-asses both Gopher and the WWW. I want to like it, but it's just like browsing the Gopherspace with a few add-ons, except there's no interoperability. You MUST get a Gemini browser for it. I guess it's kind of the same chicken/egg scenario that doomed Windows Phone. I don't see any improvements on Gopher besides requisite TLS (in which case, can't a VPN secure your data?) and some minimal MIME integration. Regardless of the protocol itself, it also has very little to offer that isn't on Gopher or the WWW. I know it's not supposed to be a replacement, but its very invention was due to shortcomings in both the WWW and Gopher. And the servers are few and far between. I haven't found a single one and Bombadillo uses Veronica-2 for search, so there's little in the way of discovery on Gemini, too. Maybe there's a Veronica for Gemini, but I have yet to find it. There are seemingly more Gemini clients than servers. Just why? Do we need 30 separate clients? Do we need GUIs for a Gopher+TLS protocol? I mean Gemini is mostly text, too. Are inline images worth the fragmentation? Probably the funniest/most confusing part of this is Bombadillo saying "bombadillo is a gopher client for the terminal."[5] on the default homepage. No mention of Gemini at all. Maybe that's why I can't find Gemini content: I've only been using a Gopher client this whole time. "Never half-ass two things. Whole-ass one thing." -Ron Swanson 0. https://yewtu.be/aklF1v8v2Mk 1. https://bombadillo.colorfield.space/ 2. gopher://codemadness.org/7/idiotbox.cgi?distrotube+gemini 3. gopher://sdf.org/1/users/ 4. gopher://sdf.org/0/users/emperor7/InnovaGopher.txt 5. gopher://colorfield.space:70/1/bombadillo-info