DescriptionFrom The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (05 Sep 00): A popular distributed document retrieval system which started as a Campus Wide Information System at the University of Minnesota. Many hosts on the Internet now run Gopher servers which provide a menu of documents. A document may be a plain text file, sound, image, submenu or other Gopher object type. It may be stored on another host or may provide the ability to search through certain files for a given string. From Jargon File (4.2.0, 31 Jan 2000): gopher n. A type of Internet service first floated around 1991 and obsolesced around 1995 by the World Wide Web. Gopher presents a menuing interface to a tree or graph of links; the links can be to documents, runnable programs, or other gopher menus arbitrarily far across the net. Some claim that the gopher software, which was originally developed at the University of Minnesota, was named after the Minnesota Gophers (a sports team). Others claim the word derives from American slang `gofer' (from "go for", dialectal "go fer"), one whose job is to run and fetch things. Finally, observe that gophers dig long tunnels, and the idea of tunneling through the net to find information was a defining metaphor for the developers. Probably all three things were true, but with the first two coming first and the gopher-tunnel metaphor serendipitously adding flavor and impetus to the project as it developed out of its concept stage.
DescriptionFrom The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (05 Sep 00): A popular distributed document retrieval system which started as a Campus Wide Information System at the University of Minnesota. Many hosts on the Internet now run Gopher servers which provide a menu of documents. A document may be a plain text file, sound, image, submenu or other Gopher object type. It may be stored on another host or may provide the ability to search through certain files for a given string. From Jargon File (4.2.0, 31 Jan 2000): gopher n. A type of Internet service first floated around 1991 and obsolesced around 1995 by the World Wide Web. Gopher presents a menuing interface to a tree or graph of links; the links can be to documents, runnable programs, or other gopher menus arbitrarily far across the net. Some claim that the gopher software, which was originally developed at the University of Minnesota, was named after the Minnesota Gophers (a sports team). Others claim the word derives from American slang `gofer' (from "go for", dialectal "go fer"), one whose job is to run and fetch things. Finally, observe that gophers dig long tunnels, and the idea of tunneling through the net to find information was a defining metaphor for the developers. Probably all three things were true, but with the first two coming first and the gopher-tunnel metaphor serendipitously adding flavor and impetus to the project as it developed out of its concept stage.
Gopher
- Spencer Hunter's Homepage (Site) - Example of a Gopher emulation in HTML, online since 1995. Under the "About this gopher and myself" directory is the author's own Gopher manifesto, "Why gopher is superior to the Web."
- QUUX (Site) - John Goerzen's Gopher server (quux.org). Hosts important documents including information on the main mailing-list about Gopher.
- Gopher Manifesto (Site) - The Bring Back Gopher Campaign.
- gopher.floodgap.com (Site) - Gopher server formerly at Point Loma Nazarene University. Splendid live links. Also featuring Veronica-2 search engine. (For gopher links like this a Gopher capable browser such as Firefox or Lynx must be used, Internet Explorer won't work).
- Aftershock (Site) - Open source Gopher server developed in Java.
- GoFish (Site) - An open source, simple, fast, low resource usage gopher server. Can also function as a web server and a gopher-to-HTTP gateway.
- Floodgap Gopher Proxy (Site) - Public gopher-to-HTTP proxy to allow the use of web browsers to explore gopherspace.
- Sean's Gopherspace (Site) - Random collection of mainly humorous stuff.
- Debian GNU/Linux: gopherd (Site) - Information and downloads for the Debian package of the UMN gopher server.
- Hungarian Electronic Library (Site) - Collection of Hungarian or Hungary/Central Europe-related full-text articles. Features a Gopher+ section.
- Whois Search (Site) - Directory provided by the sipb.mit.edu Gopher server for querying whois servers throughout the Internet. Due to a port limitation, it doesn't work with Firefox, another browser such as Lynx must be used instead.
- RFC 1436 (Site) - The Internet Gopher Protocol (a Distributed Document Search and Retrieval Protocol). F. Anklesaria, M. McCahill, P. Lindner, D. Johnson, D. Torrey, B. Albert. March 1993.
- Jugtail (Site) - An open source search engine system for the Gopher protocol. Jugtail, formerly known as Jughead, searches one server at a time whereas Veronica doesn't have this limitation.
- Moo Canada (Site) - Gopher server written for Lambda Moos.
- Veronica FAQ (Site) - Common questions and answers about Veronica, a title search and retrieval system for use with the Internet gopher.
- Rachael`s Corner (Site) - Hosts many software and hardware guides about Amiga and Gopher on Amiga. A Gopher server software for this system is also available.
- R-36 (Site) - Personal site of Christoph Lohmann hosting his software projects, and amongst these, Geomyidae, an open source Gopher server.
- Hal 3000 (Site) - Gopher server (pygopherd) serving in gopher, http and wap. Content updated hourly for weather and news as well as various other files. Jughead, Veronica and Jugtail search interfaces.
- Kostecke (Site) - Hosts GN, an open source multi-protocol server for Gopher and the World-Wide Web. A GopherMail system able to retrieve Gopher pages via e-mail is also available.
- Quasi-Indefatigable Xenolith (Site) - One of the most active Gopher servers on the Internet by a Gopher enthusiast. Many strange topics.
- Elrond's Gopher Node (Site) - Hosts a local search engine. Also offers gopher homepages.
- The World (Site) - Public gopher server. Features OBI, the Online Book Initiative.
- Super Dimension Fortress (Site) - Personal GOPHERSPACE is available to all users as well as hundreds of UNIX utilities, games and networking utilities.
- PyGS (Site) - Open source Gopher server written in Python. No longer being developed.
- JumpJet (Site) - Hosts a large archive of up-to-date files and software on Gopher along with an interesting introduction to the Gopherspace.
- Hactar.net (Site) - Hosts mgod, an open source, Gopher+ capable server for inetd.
- PyGopherd (Site) - An open source multi-protocol gopher server written in Python. Also works as an HTTP and WAP server.
- Vertrauen BBS (Site) - Gopher support demo for Synchronet, an open source BBS server. This Gopher service allows mainly a read-only access to some USENET newsgroups and other discussion boards.
- Wikipedia: Gopher (protocol) (Site) - Origins, decline, current status and technical details of the Gopher protocol.
- Jumpjet.info: Gopher Clients (Site) - A central Web source for basic clients for several operating systems.
- Spencer Hunter's Homepage (Site) - Example of a Gopher emulation in HTML, online since 1995. Under the "About this gopher and myself" directory is the author's own Gopher manifesto, "Why gopher is superior to the Web."
- QUUX (Site) - John Goerzen's Gopher server (quux.org). Hosts important documents including information on the main mailing-list about Gopher.
- Gopher Manifesto (Site) - The Bring Back Gopher Campaign.
- gopher.floodgap.com (Site) - Gopher server formerly at Point Loma Nazarene University. Splendid live links. Also featuring Veronica-2 search engine. (For gopher links like this a Gopher capable browser such as Firefox or Lynx must be used, Internet Explorer won't work).
- Aftershock (Site) - Open source Gopher server developed in Java.
- GoFish (Site) - An open source, simple, fast, low resource usage gopher server. Can also function as a web server and a gopher-to-HTTP gateway.
- Floodgap Gopher Proxy (Site) - Public gopher-to-HTTP proxy to allow the use of web browsers to explore gopherspace.
- Sean's Gopherspace (Site) - Random collection of mainly humorous stuff.
- Debian GNU/Linux: gopherd (Site) - Information and downloads for the Debian package of the UMN gopher server.
- Hungarian Electronic Library (Site) - Collection of Hungarian or Hungary/Central Europe-related full-text articles. Features a Gopher+ section.
- Whois Search (Site) - Directory provided by the sipb.mit.edu Gopher server for querying whois servers throughout the Internet. Due to a port limitation, it doesn't work with Firefox, another browser such as Lynx must be used instead.
- RFC 1436 (Site) - The Internet Gopher Protocol (a Distributed Document Search and Retrieval Protocol). F. Anklesaria, M. McCahill, P. Lindner, D. Johnson, D. Torrey, B. Albert. March 1993.
- Jugtail (Site) - An open source search engine system for the Gopher protocol. Jugtail, formerly known as Jughead, searches one server at a time whereas Veronica doesn't have this limitation.
- Moo Canada (Site) - Gopher server written for Lambda Moos.
- Veronica FAQ (Site) - Common questions and answers about Veronica, a title search and retrieval system for use with the Internet gopher.
- Rachael`s Corner (Site) - Hosts many software and hardware guides about Amiga and Gopher on Amiga. A Gopher server software for this system is also available.
- R-36 (Site) - Personal site of Christoph Lohmann hosting his software projects, and amongst these, Geomyidae, an open source Gopher server.
- Hal 3000 (Site) - Gopher server (pygopherd) serving in gopher, http and wap. Content updated hourly for weather and news as well as various other files. Jughead, Veronica and Jugtail search interfaces.
- Kostecke (Site) - Hosts GN, an open source multi-protocol server for Gopher and the World-Wide Web. A GopherMail system able to retrieve Gopher pages via e-mail is also available.
- Quasi-Indefatigable Xenolith (Site) - One of the most active Gopher servers on the Internet by a Gopher enthusiast. Many strange topics.
- Elrond's Gopher Node (Site) - Hosts a local search engine. Also offers gopher homepages.
- The World (Site) - Public gopher server. Features OBI, the Online Book Initiative.
- Super Dimension Fortress (Site) - Personal GOPHERSPACE is available to all users as well as hundreds of UNIX utilities, games and networking utilities.
- PyGS (Site) - Open source Gopher server written in Python. No longer being developed.
- JumpJet (Site) - Hosts a large archive of up-to-date files and software on Gopher along with an interesting introduction to the Gopherspace.
- Hactar.net (Site) - Hosts mgod, an open source, Gopher+ capable server for inetd.
- PyGopherd (Site) - An open source multi-protocol gopher server written in Python. Also works as an HTTP and WAP server.
- Vertrauen BBS (Site) - Gopher support demo for Synchronet, an open source BBS server. This Gopher service allows mainly a read-only access to some USENET newsgroups and other discussion boards.
- Wikipedia: Gopher (protocol) (Site) - Origins, decline, current status and technical details of the Gopher protocol.
- Jumpjet.info: Gopher Clients (Site) - A central Web source for basic clients for several operating systems.
- TidBITS: Down the Gopher Hole () - A brief presentation of the protocol, both its history and its current status, by an experienced Gopher system administrator.
Last update: 2008-05-06 13:00:23 Gopher | Copyright 2008 HubHip.com>