💾 Archived View for gem.librehacker.com › gemlog › starlog › 20240322-0.gmi captured on 2024-07-09 at 00:01:44. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2024-06-16)
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Ever since I was censored on Antenna and quit using it, exploring Geminispace for new feeds and capsules has become a lot more difficult. One trick I've used is the feature on Kennedy search engine that displays all known hosts. I will pull the links using gmni, sort them randomly, and then look at the first ten or so. This interactive Emacs function is a wrapper around the shell commands:
(defun random-gemini-capsules (n) "Pulls random capsule links from Kennedy search engine and inserts them into a new, unique buffer. Requires gmni, grep, sort, and tail to be installed. User will be prompted for the number of links desired, or a prefix argument may be used." (interactive "NCount: ") (let ((nbuff (generate-new-buffer "*random-gemini-capsules*"))) (message "pulling data from gemini://kennedy.gemi.dev, standby...") (shell-command (concat "gmni -L -j always \ gemini://kennedy.gemi.dev/observatory/known-hosts \ | grep '^=>' | sort -R | tail -n " (number-to-string n)) nbuff)))
It takes care of pulling the data, filtering down to N number of random entries, and inserting them into a new temporary buffer. At that point, I will usually use a macro to quickly open each of the links in Lagrange.
The function could be extended to also handle opening the links, say by passing them to browse-url-xdg-open, but I'm not sure how soon I will get around to that.
This work © 2024 by Christopher Howard is licensed under Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International.