Bonum Certa Men Certa

Gemini and Techrights: Still Growing in Gemini Space and Always Supporting/Loving the Protocol

Video download link



Summary: As we continue to expand in Gemini space (where our very large site became a very large and likely the largest capsule) it's worth explaining some of the overlooked merits of the protocol; unlike the World Wide Web (WWW) it does not impose things on the user/visitor, who is more or less in charge

THE value of stories isn't in images or in number of "hits"; what counts the most is accuracy and exclusivity, e.g. our EPO exclusives and 'explosive' exposé (in the journalism sense). Just merely repeating what some other sites say (like re-announcing some distro release) isn't of much value; over time the interest in such stories will decline rapidly. How many people will bother reading a release announcement or article about Firefox 10 and Ubuntu 12.04 (in 2021)? Almost nobody. Not to mention sites that lie and promote rubbish... that sort of stuff does not age well as it rapidly slips into irrelevance.



A lot of what we publish is almost timeless and it recently formed the basis for this new wiki page about the GNOME Foundation.

"How many people will bother reading a release announcement or article about Firefox 10 and Ubuntu 12.04 (in 2021)? Almost nobody."Readers of Techrights increase in number, IRC participants grew in numbers for a number of years, WWW traffic remains high, and we've been seeing in Gemini about 30,000 requests in the first week of this month (or 35,000 for the first 8 days). We saw just over 4,000 hits on the audio files of TechBytes this past week, and some more things are planned for the site (I spoke a lot with our sysadmin this morning). The site has just turned 14.5 years old, as noted earlier today (almost 30,400 blog posts so far).

In the video above I start with some mental notes (sporadic thoughts and scattered 'mindfarts') before getting to the main point, which is why Gemini excites us. It helps readers focus on what's actually important, it takes the attention off superficial things such as images, it improves accessibility, and tackles clutter. Everything it serialised. That's a design principle, an artificial and intentional limitation.

The Web kept growing for a number of decades and it ushered in unnecessary bloat, piggybacking the growing capacity of Internet networks. But we need to step back and think if we really need all that...

Roy in BerlinThat's me in Berlin 2.5 years ago when we moved between servers. It was a stressful period in my life because the previous webhost was shutting down (there was a deadline) after almost a decade. So I spent a lot of Christmas that year just worrying about what to migrate, how to migrate, what needs testing and so on. A lot remains to be done, still. The upgrades are very slow and they include not only sites but also git repositories and various services. Collaboration depends on those. The latest change was code that helps limit the size of the video gallery to just one-month portions (e.g. for the current month alone). Programming reference pages/manuals have meanwhile been converted to Gemini protocol and format. Moreover, as per the mailing list, some Git stuff can be done over Gemini instead of the Web. That's what happens when so many geeks embrace something and extend it to suit their needs, without extending the underlying protocol.

Over the coming weeks or maybe months we'll try to release some of the code by branching or setting apart things that are ready (safe) for public access and things that for the time being need further preparatory work. Some of the code is Gemini stuff, programmed specifically to convert Techrights and accommodate the capsule (35,495 pages at the time of writing).

Gemini will probably never replace WWW, but it works well in tandem and it reduces the load/strain. Otherwise it's difficult and potentially expensive to operate a very large site. There are other benefits, enjoyed by those who are easy to forget. To quote a new article entitled "What I Learned by Relearning HTML": "Accessibility was also something I had never considered in depth. I knew that images should have alt descriptions, and that was about it. One of the course’s key points is that using the appropriate semantic elements is important to making a site more accessible."

We urge readers to not only get a Gemini client but also to create their own capsules. It's not hard. It can also be very cheap because provisioning typically involves one's home computer (or single-board computer).

By the way, the wife's Viber call went off towards the end of the video. Thankfully it was the end of the video anyway.

Schloss Charlottenburg Berlin
Schloss Charlottenburg, Berlin

Recent Techrights' Posts

Kazakhstan Doesn't Need GAFAM Datacentres (Spy Hubs)
Suffice to say, as far as we can gather nothing came out from the empty (false) promises of GAFAM's "data centers in Kazakhstan"
Christmas Music Project: Back to When Music Was Music
now Canonical (or Ubuntu) says we should make available tens of gigabytes of disk space
Browsing Techrights With a GUI and 10 Megabytes of RAM Per Tab
Some people say it's not possible in 2025, maybe in part because they depend on very bloated software
Gemini Links 25/12/2025: Hibernation and TV Detox
Links for the day
 
The Indigenous Community Versus Corporate AstroTurt and 'Cancel Culture'
Good people will recognise exactly what's happening here and respond to it tactfully
Richard Stallman: Epstein is a Serial Rapist. Bill Epsteingate: Epstein is a Friend.
Supporting the FSF (or Richard Stallman) is supporting those who asserted Epstein had serially raped women
The Paradox of GAFAM: Saying You Protect Women, Appointing Abusers of Women to Run the Company
older articles
Censored by FreeBSD Core Team Secretary, Reinstated After Talking About it in Public
FreeBSD misfiring a CoC?
Links 26/12/2025: Chatbot Toys Terrorising Children, US Undeclared "War on Terror" Unilaterally Extends to Nigeria During Holidays
Links for the day
Links 26/12/2025: French Postal Services Under Russian Attack, U.S. Cheetos Accuse People Who Obstruct Information Warfare by Russia of "Censorship"
Links for the day
Debian's Daniel Kahn Gillmor is Wrong, Signal is No "Gold Standard" (It's Also Promoted by Proponents of Back Doors)
I'm not too sure why Debian or the ACLU would wish to associate with this
Next Year Will be the Year of Quantum, Just Like 2020, 2015, 2010, 2005 and So On
"Quantum" is the future
The Silent Power of Coercion Over Speech
The important thing is optics
So Simple That You Can Touch and Feel It
In light of recent experiences
Internet Relay Chat (IRC) Under Attack by Cross-Network Spam Floods
So far we've been spared (our network has not been targeted at all) [...] Let's hope the spam won't discourage the hundreds of thousands of people worldwide who still use IRC
An "AI-Infused" Windows
Microsoft Windows isn't becoming a worthless pile of garbage by accident
Microsoft Laid Off Over 30,000 People This Year, Coders Are "Too Expensive"
Go get some popcorn. Microsoft "slopware" is about to get real!
Critics Have Long Said Microsoft Produces "Slopware", Microsoft Wants to Prove Them Right
Slop instead of code is a step in the right direction?
The Top 8 Innovations of IBM in 2025
What innovations will come out from IBM in 2026?
And as the Year Turns...
The significance of new years isn't based on geology or astronomy or anything like that
Appliances Versus Computers
Replacing a computer inside an object of some kind or inside an appliance (which nowadays includes "modern" cars) isn't simple and isn't cheap
A Dark Side of Europe
They try hard to silence people who speak about these issues
Why People Love Techrights (and Also Loved "Boycott Novell")
I will continue to publish for many decades to come
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Thursday, December 25, 2025
IRC logs for Thursday, December 25, 2025
A Tribute to Richard Stallman
It's about knowledge and sharing
Links 26/12/2025: Impermanence, Salt and Thermometer, Freetube
Links for the day
Canonical is Making the Cost of PCs Very High, Due to Unnecessary Ubuntu Bloat
They say the reason for the price surge is LLM hype/frenzy
Canonical's Ubuntu is Bloatware
How did Ubuntu get so fat?
The EPO is a Very Vicious Organisation You Neither Wish to Join Nor Stay in for "Too Long"
Consider what the EPO thinks of its own workers, the staff that actually does real work
2026 Will Hopefully Turn Out to be Slopless
we seem to be starting the post-Christmas period on the right footing
Links 25/12/2025: Mail Carriers in "a Murky Future", Dihydroxyacetone Man’s "Chip Embargo Against China Backfiring Spectacularly"
Links for the day
The Register MS: All I Want For Xmas is Microsoft
they actually put effort into it
How to Win Nobel Prize for Peace
Do you get to Heaven (or peace platitudes) by sleeping with 72 virgins?
The Right to Repair (Especially When Products Are So Poorly Made)
Many electrical appliances fail often/quick and are nearly impossible to repair
Links 25/12/2025: Ample Cover-up Found in Jeffrey Epstein Files; ChatGPT Causes Psychosis, Not a Good Use Case
Links for the day
Giving Money to Free Software
In life, people must make sacrifices to do what's right and just
The Register MS: Don't Use Linux
That really says a lot about The Register MS
EPO People Power - Part XV - EPO Cocainegate to Resume This Weekend
The next installment (number 16) will probably come out this weekend
Microsoft: XBox is Going "Online", "Cloud"...
XBox as a console is pretty much dead
The Year of the Bubble
We hope that in 2026 the marketing liars will find some new buzzwords to latch onto and quit calling everything "AI"
Mozilla Firefox is a GAFAM Browser With Slop, Move to a Free Software Web Browser
on mobile the options would be more limited
libera.chat Was Under Attack Last Night
Several months from now libera.chat turns 5
Free Software Foundation (FSF) Raises Over $300,000 Before Christmas
the FSF made it past $300,000
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Wednesday, December 24, 2025
IRC logs for Wednesday, December 24, 2025
Sounds Like Microsoft 'Open' 'AI' (Slop) Ran Out of Money to Borrow
Maybe in 2026 slop will be scarce enough that eventually, maybe by year's end, we'll manage to just ignore it.
In India, Staff Works on Christmas Eve, Becomes Unemployed (Last Day)
The company fires based on how "expensive" workers are more often than based on their productivity
Links 24/12/2025: US TACOs on "China Chip Tariffs Until 2027", Russian Snickers in U.K. Convenience Shops
Links for the day
Links 24/12/2025: Cheeto President "Accused of Rape in Jeffrey Epstein Files", Windows to be Replaced by Slop?
Links for the day
Gemini Links 24/12/2025: Tea, Love During Pain, and Gaming This Year
Links for the day
GAFAM is a Bubble, Nothing is Free in This World
Nothing is free in the world
My New CD Player/Stereo Didn't Even Last a Year, My CD Player/Stereo From the Early 1990s Still Works
That helped reaffirm what I said in recent years about production/manufacturing standards of "modern" things
GitHub Isn't Free, Microsoft Subsidises It (Losses) to Entrap You Inside Proprietary Software, Now Come the Fees
GitHub was never free
XBox Console is Dead, "Microsoft is Rethinking What XBox is"
So XBox is now "cloud"
IBM SkillsBuild: Teaching Slop to People
What skills does that give? Making more slopfarms?
Maybe 2026 Will be the Last Year of António Campinos
Europe's patent system is run by thugs and it serves thugs
2025: The Year LLM Slop Rose to Prominence and Then Fell
the slop hype is bound to end
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Tuesday, December 23, 2025
IRC logs for Tuesday, December 23, 2025
Links 24/12/2025: Spotify Surveillance and Shadow Over Rule of Law in Hong Kong
Links for the day