October 30, 2004 1:35 AM
I wonder how many even remember gopher. FTP and gopher were the
primary means of getting information on the internet back in the
beginning. Gopherspace has reduced to a few servers that still has
content. Sure, the WWW has it's hyperlinks and html and what's
not. But gopher has it's own unique advantages as well. I remember
reading about Veronica1 and Jughead2 in my 12th standard
prescribed text by Sumit Arora and wondering if archie comics owned
the internet or something3. John Goerzen's gopher site is one of
the best places to get started in gopherspace. There are some things
that you can only find in gopherspace like documents from the past frozen
in time describing in detail about ancient VAX assembly code.
The key idea concerning plain text information like in this Wiki file where information is the aim and not presentation or graphics might sound boring, but it is fast. Exactly the same reason why my site uses only 388 bytes of graphics. Gopher clients out there are very rare and the latest Mozilla derivatives don't support gopher+. Internet Explorer 6 has absolutely no support for gopher. One of the noticeable differences between gopher and www is that gopher imposes a much stronger hierarchy. A gopherspace is a menu of entries that is loaded from the server. Imagine a www page with all the links in a tree like fashion on your left half and the only the information on each page. No fancy javascript, css, graphical buttons etc. The links provide descriptions as well4.
The choices are between interactivity, presentation which www provides
and raw information which gopher provides. Some direct quotes from the
gopher:// manifesto:
[snip]
This article for the technically eager provides an interesting way to look at the past.
Some sweet gopher pages: Ada Enchantress of Numbers, An Interview with Phil Zimmerman, creator of PGP, 10 C Commandments.
[1] A Gopher search engine.
[2] Another gopher search engine though it's searching technique is different.
[3] Yes, I have a wild imagination.
[4] Which unfortunately, most modern browsers can't display.