|
|
|
|
|
by ploum
1064 days ago
|
|
There’s nothing to argue. The "World Wide Web" or "Web" is defined as servers and clients communicating using the HTTP protocol. (Usually, it means that content is using HTML but this is not mandatory). "Gemini" is defined as servers and client communicating using the "Gemini" protocol (and content is usually in the gemtext format). Both are part of the Internet, which is defined as an INTERconnection of NETworks, thus a physical worldwide network of computers. Any computer with a public IP (Internet Address) is thus part of the Internet (in your house, is usually your box which is part of the Internet and acting as a gateway for your computer). So : Internet is mostly an hardware network. You then join different part of the Internet by running adhoc software: Web, Gemini, Gopher, Mail, FTP, Usenet, etc… Those have very clear and crisp definitions, there absolutely nothing to argue about. A "Web Gemini client" means a browser capable of accessing both Gemini and the Web, which is not the case here. It is a "Gemini browser". |
|
In spoken human language we have this concept called connotation, "web" being associated with http servers and clients is one example of this.
There is no rule that a word must only have one connotation, and Gemni is very much a "a complex system of interconnected elements".
So basically, this is just your opinion and you aren't the authority on what the word "web" means, and it's okay to tell people that the word is often used in a context they might not have known about, but claiming that "there is nothing to argue" is not correct.