Gemini is a new protocol, which acts as a replacement for HTTP. Its accompanying markup language, Gemtext, is an extremely stripped down version of markdown and acts as a replacement for HTML.<p>Gemspace is in early days, but I find I like write there much more than in the open web. I've been using an http proxy so that I can post my writings here, and I wonder if I could, one day, just post a gemspace link.<p>Would you follow it? Links look like this:
gemini://geminiprotocol.net/docs/specification.gmi
This is the first I’m hearing of it, but I’m guessing it’s going to have an uphill battle now that Google named its AI Gemini. My first thought was that it is Google related, and when I did a search, Google’s AI was featured prominently in the results. I had to know what I was looking for, based on your description, to find it.<p>I don’t think there is anything I want to read badly enough to jump over to a separate browser. The same goes for .onion links. The topic would need to be very compelling, without a mirror on the “normal” internet.
I'd suggest you just start doing that, perhaps with an email to HN mods requesting support for Gemini URIs.<p>I'm pretty sure that you'll get shot down (politely) the first few times, but the requests (and appearance of Gemini URIs) will give an indication of whether or not the protocol itself is gaining in usage.<p>I do have a Gemini browser installed on a few systems, but use it rarely for want of content or presentation of links. OTOH, I've watched the rise in prevalence of Mastodon / Fediverse links on HN with interest.