Virtual Private Server (VPS) Hosting provided by Central Point Networking cpnllc.com
For some reason, the "Nodelist" and "Recent Callers" features are not working.
| Sysop: | Ray Quinn |
|---|---|
| Location: | Visalia, CA |
| Users: | 60 |
| Nodes: | 10 (0 / 10) |
| Uptime: | 72:06:30 |
| Calls: | 12 |
| Files: | 12,939 |
| Messages: | 99,285 |
Check out the US 99 menu above for links to information about US Highway 99, after which the US 99 BBS is named.
Be sure to click on the Amateur Radio menu item above for packet BBSes, packet software, packet organizations, as well as packet how-to's. Also included is links to local and some not-so-local Amateur Radio Clubs.
roman wrote to All <=-
I made a build based on a modern Windows browser in 2024 to work
with the Gopher:// protocol. Now any owner of a modern computer
with modern Windows can access Gopher:// without problems.
What about us owners of a modern computer with modern Linux?
Phigan wrote to Gamgee <=-
Re: Re: New Gopher:// browser for
By: Gamgee to roman on Mon Jan 15 2024 07:43 am
What about us owners of a modern computer with modern Linux?
You can use either links (links2?) or lynx. Or just gopher.
Well, yes. But the point of the OP was that there as a new (?) GUI/graphical browser to use on gopher sites. I know about links/lynx,
but was referring to something like firefox/chromium (in a GUI) on
Linux.
Phigan wrote to Gamgee <=-
Re: Re: New Gopher:// browser for
By: Gamgee to Phigan on Mon Jan 15 2024 03:30 pm
Well, yes. But the point of the OP was that there as a new (?) GUI/graphical browser to use on gopher sites. I know about links/lynx,
but was referring to something like firefox/chromium (in a GUI) on
Linux.
Hm, is the point to be able to use the mouse? IIRC those text web
browsers started accepting mouse events, so just theme up a
terminal with the colors of your gui browser or however you like
it, and bam. It's all just text, right?
Well, yes, again... No, the point isn't about using a mouse, and I know it's all text. It was about the original post specifying that this was
all for Windows, so I wondered about an equivalent for Linux. I mean,
it's all text under Windows, too, right?
What would be the difference between text inside a gui window and text inside a terminal inside a gui window?
I understand the technical difference, but from a usability and aesthetics perspective, you can make them the same.