Personally, I think markdown would make the most sense in this usecase. > I have an idea for quickly and vastly expanding the amount of content > that is available in Geminispace. What about a Wikipedia mirror/proxy? I think this idea is kinda flawed. I can only speak for myself, but I'm guessing that most people here want the Geminispace to expand naturally, and for interesting and unique content to come up. There's nothing wrong with a Wikipedia proxy, but I feel like it misses the point a bit. If I want to read Wikipedia, I would just use Firefox. makeworld ??????? Original Message ??????? On Friday, May 15, 2020 6:10 PM, Travis Briggs <audiodude at gmail.com> wrote: > Hello, > > I have an idea for quickly and vastly expanding the amount of content that is available in Geminispace. What about a Wikipedia mirror/proxy? I put proxy in quotes because it would modify the documents it returned in order to be largely text based. > > The main thing that's tripping me up is the fact that wikipedia articles are written with a lot of inline links. And navigating those links is a key part of the Wikipedia browsing experience. > > My naive read of the text/gemini format is that I would have to do something?like: > > The main thing that's > =>?gemini://gem.wiki-mirror.pizza/article.cgi?Tripping?tripping > me up is the fact that > => gemini://gem.wiki-mirror.pizza/article.cgi?Wikipedia wikipedia > articles are > => gemini://gem.wiki-mirror.pizza/article.cgi?Writing written > with a lot of inline links. > > Which seems really clunky. The other option I'm considering is serving text/markdown, which I assume most Gemini clients would display as plain text. The problem then is that [links won't be clickable](http://dev/null). But maybe the mere existence of so much markdown content would incentivize some client author to add native support? > > Feedback is appreciated, thanks! > -Travis
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