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id #65 : anonymous : 2024-02-01 20:45 UTC : if not gopher, what than | |
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?Gopher rocks! | |
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id #80 : anonymous : 2024-02-03 10:21 UTC | |
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How do you solve problem of documents with images? | |
Documents with plots are useful. Gemini is better. | |
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id #81 : anonymous : 2024-02-04 01:52 UTC | |
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As per the c. 2000 gopher manifesto, letting people put | |
hyperlinks in non-directory-like documents begins a slide | |
downhill (or something). On the other hand we can just | |
proximally solve your problem. -use elpher in emacs -browse | |
to a gopher txt item that is an orgmode document - orgmode | |
renders images and does links as expected. But this is a | |
client side joy and org documents are meant to be sane | |
without rendered images etc as well. | |
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id #85 : anonymous : 2024-02-04 07:42 UTC | |
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Regardless of the protocol or format, I've become a fan of | |
documents that simply use a numbered list of links at the | |
end, with references in the prose as needed. | |
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id #88 : anonymous : 2024-02-04 18:36 UTC | |
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The easiest "gopher-like" way to do this is to create a | |
directory for your article with the article in a text file, | |
and a sub-directory to place all the images in. Readers can | |
read the article, then use their gopher client to hop into | |
the sub-directory and browse the images. | |
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