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[ANN] List of Gemini web mirrors

paper@tilde.institute <paper (a) tilde.institute>

Hi, geminispace is growing and some web services are getting mirrored on
gemini. I am starting a list of mirrors on gemini. If you know about
more mirrors than I have there, I will be happy to hear about them. I
also wrote a page about how clients could benefit from this list.

gemini://gempaper.strangled.net/mirrorlist/

Paper

Link to individual message.

solderpunk <solderpunk (a) SDF.ORG>

On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 05:56:57AM -0400, paper at tilde.institute wrote:
 
> gemini://gempaper.strangled.net/mirrorlist/

Good job with the "Why?" page!  You convinced me quickly.

Cheers,
Solderpunk

Link to individual message.

paper@tilde.institute <paper (a) tilde.institute>

On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 10:17:58AM +0000, solderpunk wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 05:56:57AM -0400, paper at tilde.institute wrote:
> 
> Good job with the "Why?" page!  You convinced me quickly.
> 
> Cheers,
> Solderpunk

I wasn't sure the Why page was good enough, thanks alot.

Paper

Link to individual message.

defdefred <defdefred (a) protonmail.com>

Soon a wikipedia mirror?

:-)

??????? Original Message ???????
On Wednesday 17 June 2020 12:24, <paper at tilde.institute> wrote:

> On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 10:17:58AM +0000, solderpunk wrote:
>
> > On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 05:56:57AM -0400, paper at tilde.institute wrote:
> > Good job with the "Why?" page! You convinced me quickly.
> > Cheers,
> > Solderpunk
>
> I wasn't sure the Why page was good enough, thanks alot.
>
> Paper

Link to individual message.

Koushik Roy <koushik (a) meff.me>

Thank you so much for this page, I was actually planning on starting a 
Lobsters mirror myself before looking at this.

- meff

On 6/17/20 3:45 AM, defdefred wrote:
> Soon a wikipedia mirror?
> 
> :-)
> 
> ??????? Original Message ???????
> On Wednesday 17 June 2020 12:24, <paper at tilde.institute> wrote:
> 
>> On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 10:17:58AM +0000, solderpunk wrote:
>>
>>> On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 05:56:57AM -0400, paper at tilde.institute wrote:
>>> Good job with the "Why?" page! You convinced me quickly.
>>> Cheers,
>>> Solderpunk
>>
>> I wasn't sure the Why page was good enough, thanks alot.
>>
>> Paper
> 
>

Link to individual message.

Peter Vernigorov <pitr.vern (a) gmail.com>

Wikipedia on Gemini by popular demand:

gemini://wp.pitr.ca/en/Gemini_(constellation)

This is not strictly a mirror, as a dump of wikipedia is quite large -
https://dumps.wikimedia.org/enwiki/20200520/ - but rather a proxy that
makes request to wikipedia API, parses wikitext into an HTML DOM
(since wikitext supports HTML tags) which is then simplified into
text/gemini. This process is not perfect and there are quite a few
imperfections. But before I sink more time into this, I wonder if
text/gemini is indeed the best format for wikipedia articles. Pages
are usually huge, with lots of links. And this is even before
considerations for how best to handle images, tables, special symbols,
special tags, etc. From trying to browse it myself, my first
impression is that wikipedia format can't/shouldn't be simplified any
further than it already is on the web. What do others think?

On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 12:45 PM defdefred <defdefred at protonmail.com> wrote:
>
> Soon a wikipedia mirror?
>
> :-)
>
> ??????? Original Message ???????
> On Wednesday 17 June 2020 12:24, <paper at tilde.institute> wrote:
>
> > On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 10:17:58AM +0000, solderpunk wrote:
> >
> > > On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 05:56:57AM -0400, paper at tilde.institute wrote:
> > > Good job with the "Why?" page! You convinced me quickly.
> > > Cheers,
> > > Solderpunk
> >
> > I wasn't sure the Why page was good enough, thanks alot.
> >
> > Paper
>
>

Link to individual message.

James Tomasino <tomasino (a) lavabit.com>

On 6/19/20 10:46 PM, Peter Vernigorov wrote:
> I wonder if
> text/gemini is indeed the best format for wikipedia articles.

I can't answer that definitively, but I can say from experience that 
gopherpedia is used quite a lot and referenced in gopher phlogs all the 
time. I suspect gemini will likewise enjoy its existence.

gopher://gopherpedia.com

Link to individual message.

colecmac@protonmail.com <colecmac (a) protonmail.com>

This is very cool and works well, nice work! That's a good way of handling
inline links, I'm going to add that as an option to md2gemini.

Do you think you will add caching to this service, if you haven't already?
Probably would improve response times a lot.

> I wonder if text/gemini is indeed the best format for wikipedia articles.

It is not, mostly because of the lack of inline links. However, you've done
a good job with this mirror/proxy and I'm happy it exists. But in general
I wouldn't recommend text/gemini for wiki type stuff.

makeworld

??????? Original Message ???????
On Friday, June 19, 2020 6:46 PM, Peter Vernigorov <pitr.vern at gmail.com> wrote:

> Wikipedia on Gemini by popular demand:
>
> gemini://wp.pitr.ca/en/Gemini_(constellation)
>
> This is not strictly a mirror, as a dump of wikipedia is quite large -
> https://dumps.wikimedia.org/enwiki/20200520/ - but rather a proxy that
> makes request to wikipedia API, parses wikitext into an HTML DOM
> (since wikitext supports HTML tags) which is then simplified into
> text/gemini. This process is not perfect and there are quite a few
> imperfections. But before I sink more time into this, I wonder if
> text/gemini is indeed the best format for wikipedia articles. Pages
> are usually huge, with lots of links. And this is even before
> considerations for how best to handle images, tables, special symbols,
> special tags, etc. From trying to browse it myself, my first
> impression is that wikipedia format can't/shouldn't be simplified any
> further than it already is on the web. What do others think?
>
> On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 12:45 PM defdefred defdefred at protonmail.com wrote:
>
> > Soon a wikipedia mirror?
> > :-)
> > ??????? Original Message ???????
> > On Wednesday 17 June 2020 12:24, paper at tilde.institute wrote:
> >
> > > On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 10:17:58AM +0000, solderpunk wrote:
> > >
> > > > On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 05:56:57AM -0400, paper at tilde.institute wrote:
> > > > Good job with the "Why?" page! You convinced me quickly.
> > > > Cheers,
> > > > Solderpunk
> > >
> > > I wasn't sure the Why page was good enough, thanks alot.
> > > Paper

Link to individual message.

Luke Emmet <luke (a) marmaladefoo.com>

Hi Peter

That looks great and is worth keeping if you are happy to host it.

The question of what is the equivalent of in-line links in Gemini comes 
up from time to time, either as it is a natural thing that authors want 
to do and already do, or when re-presenting existing markdown or html 
for gemini.

The most common idiom I have seen is the use of square brackets to 
indicate the placemarker in the text line as a citation, followed by a 
link having the reference. For example like this [1] that would be one 
of the subsequent links, or another one [2] that goes to the second one. 
It is a common form seen in many places, such as academic papers with 
footnotes and references.

=> url display text with matching item at end [1]
=> url2 [2] display text with match at beginning

Personally I find this better than simply having the text without any 
clear boundary, as it is clearer where the citation is made. For example 
if you just use a single word it is unclear which usage of it is the 
link anchor. There could even be multiple words that match, and you 
don't want them all implicitly referencing the link. So it is more 
specific this way.

My personal view is that this type of re-wiring-up, to put back the 
links into the text could be a client option, and user choice. Then the 
hotspots in the text could be reinstated. The criteria would be:

1. Link anchor uses the defined pattern e.g.

  - [n] as the first or last item in the display text
  - or more adventurously, matching text in a square bracket as the 
whole link line display text like this: [the thing]

2. After the line is a list of links, and there is a match as the first 
or last word in the display text. Or maybe just in the following content 
(like a list of references at the end of the page)

3. Then the link anchor is wired up to the target

  - optional) the link line is optionally hidden (again user and client 
choice)

It would be nice if the mirroring tools adopted a common convention on 
this, as then clients can do more work to improve the UI for users.

And anyway, this all gracefully degrades and is just a client nicety. It 
could be noted as part of our collective common practice.

Best wishes

  - Luke

On 19-Jun-2020 23:46, Peter Vernigorov wrote:
> Wikipedia on Gemini by popular demand:
>
> gemini://wp.pitr.ca/en/Gemini_(constellation)
>
> This is not strictly a mirror, as a dump of wikipedia is quite large -
> https://dumps.wikimedia.org/enwiki/20200520/ - but rather a proxy that
> makes request to wikipedia API, parses wikitext into an HTML DOM
> (since wikitext supports HTML tags) which is then simplified into
> text/gemini. This process is not perfect and there are quite a few
> imperfections. But before I sink more time into this, I wonder if
> text/gemini is indeed the best format for wikipedia articles. Pages
> are usually huge, with lots of links. And this is even before
> considerations for how best to handle images, tables, special symbols,
> special tags, etc. From trying to browse it myself, my first
> impression is that wikipedia format can't/shouldn't be simplified any
> further than it already is on the web. What do others think?
>
> On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 12:45 PM defdefred<defdefred at protonmail.com>  wrote:
>> Soon a wikipedia mirror?
>>
>> :-)
>>
>> ??????? Original Message ???????
>> On Wednesday 17 June 2020 12:24,<paper at tilde.institute>  wrote:
>>
>>> On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 10:17:58AM +0000, solderpunk wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 05:56:57AM -0400, paper at tilde.institute wrote:
>>>> Good job with the "Why?" page! You convinced me quickly.
>>>> Cheers,
>>>> Solderpunk
>>> I wasn't sure the Why page was good enough, thanks alot.
>>>
>>> Paper
>>

Link to individual message.

paper@tilde.institute <paper (a) tilde.institute>

Thanks, I added this wikipedia mirror/proxy and Alex's mirror to the
list.

Paper

On Sat, Jun 20, 2020 at 12:46:11AM +0200, Peter Vernigorov wrote:
> Wikipedia on Gemini by popular demand:
> 
> gemini://wp.pitr.ca/en/Gemini_(constellation)
> 
> This is not strictly a mirror, as a dump of wikipedia is quite large -
> https://dumps.wikimedia.org/enwiki/20200520/ - but rather a proxy that
> makes request to wikipedia API, parses wikitext into an HTML DOM
> (since wikitext supports HTML tags) which is then simplified into
> text/gemini. This process is not perfect and there are quite a few
> imperfections. But before I sink more time into this, I wonder if
> text/gemini is indeed the best format for wikipedia articles. Pages
> are usually huge, with lots of links. And this is even before
> considerations for how best to handle images, tables, special symbols,
> special tags, etc. From trying to browse it myself, my first
> impression is that wikipedia format can't/shouldn't be simplified any
> further than it already is on the web. What do others think?
> 
> On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 12:45 PM defdefred <defdefred at protonmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > Soon a wikipedia mirror?
> >
> > :-)
> >
> > ??????? Original Message ???????
> > On Wednesday 17 June 2020 12:24, <paper at tilde.institute> wrote:
> >
> > > On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 10:17:58AM +0000, solderpunk wrote:
> > >
> > > > On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 05:56:57AM -0400, paper at tilde.institute wrote:
> > > > Good job with the "Why?" page! You convinced me quickly.
> > > > Cheers,
> > > > Solderpunk
> > >
> > > I wasn't sure the Why page was good enough, thanks alot.
> > >
> > > Paper
> >
> >

Link to individual message.

Peter Vernigorov <pitr.vern (a) gmail.com>

Thanks for feedback, Luke. I initially went with the [N] syntax. What
I found out was that "url [1]" does not work because of things like
"[constellation]s" becoming "constellation [1]s". "[1] url" is not
ideal either, as some clients, like av98, would already have a link
counter, and since I have a 2 links hardcoded at the top of the page
to search and home, I ended up needing to increment link counter by 2,
and even then it would be rendered as "[22] [22] name". In the end I
changed it to "... [url] ..." so the reader knows that they can get
more info by finding the link at the end of the paragraph. Hopefully
it's a good compromise.

On Sat, Jun 20, 2020 at 10:19 AM Luke Emmet <luke at marmaladefoo.com> wrote:
>
> Hi Peter
>
> That looks great and is worth keeping if you are happy to host it.
>
> The question of what is the equivalent of in-line links in Gemini comes
> up from time to time, either as it is a natural thing that authors want
> to do and already do, or when re-presenting existing markdown or html
> for gemini.
>
> The most common idiom I have seen is the use of square brackets to
> indicate the placemarker in the text line as a citation, followed by a
> link having the reference. For example like this [1] that would be one
> of the subsequent links, or another one [2] that goes to the second one.
> It is a common form seen in many places, such as academic papers with
> footnotes and references.
>
> => url display text with matching item at end [1]
> => url2 [2] display text with match at beginning
>
> Personally I find this better than simply having the text without any
> clear boundary, as it is clearer where the citation is made. For example
> if you just use a single word it is unclear which usage of it is the
> link anchor. There could even be multiple words that match, and you
> don't want them all implicitly referencing the link. So it is more
> specific this way.
>
> My personal view is that this type of re-wiring-up, to put back the
> links into the text could be a client option, and user choice. Then the
> hotspots in the text could be reinstated. The criteria would be:
>
> 1. Link anchor uses the defined pattern e.g.
>
>   - [n] as the first or last item in the display text
>   - or more adventurously, matching text in a square bracket as the
> whole link line display text like this: [the thing]
>
> 2. After the line is a list of links, and there is a match as the first
> or last word in the display text. Or maybe just in the following content
> (like a list of references at the end of the page)
>
> 3. Then the link anchor is wired up to the target
>
>   - optional) the link line is optionally hidden (again user and client
> choice)
>
> It would be nice if the mirroring tools adopted a common convention on
> this, as then clients can do more work to improve the UI for users.
>
> And anyway, this all gracefully degrades and is just a client nicety. It
> could be noted as part of our collective common practice.
>
> Best wishes
>
>   - Luke
>
> On 19-Jun-2020 23:46, Peter Vernigorov wrote:
> > Wikipedia on Gemini by popular demand:
> >
> > gemini://wp.pitr.ca/en/Gemini_(constellation)
> >
> > This is not strictly a mirror, as a dump of wikipedia is quite large -
> > https://dumps.wikimedia.org/enwiki/20200520/ - but rather a proxy that
> > makes request to wikipedia API, parses wikitext into an HTML DOM
> > (since wikitext supports HTML tags) which is then simplified into
> > text/gemini. This process is not perfect and there are quite a few
> > imperfections. But before I sink more time into this, I wonder if
> > text/gemini is indeed the best format for wikipedia articles. Pages
> > are usually huge, with lots of links. And this is even before
> > considerations for how best to handle images, tables, special symbols,
> > special tags, etc. From trying to browse it myself, my first
> > impression is that wikipedia format can't/shouldn't be simplified any
> > further than it already is on the web. What do others think?
> >
> > On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 12:45 PM defdefred<defdefred at protonmail.com>  wrote:
> >> Soon a wikipedia mirror?
> >>
> >> :-)
> >>
> >> ??????? Original Message ???????
> >> On Wednesday 17 June 2020 12:24,<paper at tilde.institute>  wrote:
> >>
> >>> On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 10:17:58AM +0000, solderpunk wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 05:56:57AM -0400, paper at tilde.institute wrote:
> >>>> Good job with the "Why?" page! You convinced me quickly.
> >>>> Cheers,
> >>>> Solderpunk
> >>> I wasn't sure the Why page was good enough, thanks alot.
> >>>
> >>> Paper
> >>

Link to individual message.

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