I don't think we've even seen the tip of the iceberg. I think the potential of what the Internet is going to do to society, both good and bad, is unimaginable. I think we're actually on the cusp of something exhilerating and terrifying
~ David Bowie, 1999
Two decades later, the above seems true now more than ever, though old habits die hard - and the Internet these days is certainly a place of bad habits.
Thank you to Gemini, it's architects and their work, for bringing to life this online space. It seems a better fit than any Web communities I've come across, and some differences to gopherspace that also make sense.
I don't know if this experiment in my own Gemini server-space will amount to much, but I hope at the least I may contribute something befitting the kind of digital communities I should like to see.
I say some vague stuff in the about page of this server about how I'm interested in something like 'services and resource-driven computational culture'. I left those words in because I enjoy how vague they sound. What I think I mean is that some of my aspirations for tech in this kind of space would be to try and develop useful resources or services, as well as what we more formally encounter as 'content'.
It seems to me as though we're surrounded by content in many forms, the majority of it commercial and exploitative. I also feel as though we trudge through wild, otherwordly media ecologies daily and where we perhaps haven't always taken the care to document, map and communicate what are the poison berries and what are the fruits. I would like to cultivate these ecologies as well as inhabit or pass through them. I feel that we can reconfigure our connections and our relationship with media and digitality in different ways, particularly where those connections are mediated by computational technology - here I feel there is a lot of potential beyond content where the 'tip of the iceberg' is still way beyond the horizon.
I say all this, though I note that I'm an amateur with only some very basic programming under my belt, so I'm not expecting that I'll get much further than musings on these kind of developments in the near-future. But one day, perhaps. What I'd really like to see more of is some of the types of functionality that are often wrapped up and sold as a commercial proposition finding alternative, weird and homespun incarnations in a non-commercial, community setting; tools and information systems about our world that overcome the coercions of capital, surveillance and political manipulation. Locally-rooted, sustainable, radical tech communities. That's my dream - hello gemini.