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THE mailing lists of Gemini point out some new games for Gemini Protocol; not all Gemini clients ("browsers") support these at the moment, not even an older version of Lagrange and the widely-used Amfora (presented on the right hand side at the start of the video above), but this comes to show how creative spirits and server-side programming can accomplish a great deal. One can, in theory, do banking in Gemini (certificates make sessions, which are are no less secure than on the Web); many flight booking agencies used or still use 'lesser' UIs to do their job (like entering input, in a specialised querying language, for the server to interpret and return results).
"The media will almost never mention Gemini, but that intentional snubbing -- due to a lack of financial incentive, e.g. spies and advertisers -- does not prevent Gemini's growth."The above video shows SpellBinding, which is new, and then Wordtunneler. There are even online 'chat clients' for Gemini. Don't discount it as primitive and useless; it's actually vastly superior/cleaner than other hypertext protocols/spaces when it comes to signal/noise ratio because the Web became a spamfarm. That's just the direction the Web has taken and will continue to take.
The media will almost never mention Gemini, but that intentional snubbing -- due to a lack of financial incentive, e.g. spies and advertisers -- does not prevent Gemini's growth. Earlier this week we reached 1,827 known (to Lupa) capsules in total. Just a couple of days after reaching 1,807. 2,000 by year's end isn't insurmountable. ⬆