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2020-01-09 | #crawlers #metadata #hashtags | @Acidus
@JBanana has had an interesting couple of posts about #hashtags. They have built a Geminispace crawler that looks for hashtags, and have also built an index of all hashtags, with links to all the pages that use them.
>On other services, hashtags are popular. I wondered if they could work on Gemini too. So I wrote a crawler to find them and link to them
Here is more about @JBanana's approach to hashtags.
I think hashtags are an *awesome* idea because it an easy, unintrusive, transparent way authors can indicate what keyword or topics a page might cover.
Hashtags are perfect for the smol ethos of Gemini and Gemtext:
Hashtags are a easy way for authors emphasize a thought or theme (#LGBTQ+, #cats) or make a joke (e.g. #fail, #FML)
Hashtags can be used inline, in any virtually line type.
Hashtags don't require anything special from the clients.
If you want, you can assume hashtags have no meaning at all.
However, hashtags allow crawlers or indexers, like what JBanana created, to build indexes of pages with a common theme or topic. Imagine clicking on an index of "#fail", and getting a list of funny stories from around gemini space. Current gemini search engines don't do a good job surfacing stuff like that.
SHHHHH! Don't say the M-word! Are you trying to create yet another massive thread on the gemini mailing list about all surprisingly complicated issues around document meta data and how to include them in gemtext! We don't need any more of those that's for sure!
Joking aside, don't think about it too hard. Hashtags are a neat idea that can enable some cool experiments. And we don't have to get a group of agree on an approved list and language for name/value pairs!
Do whatever you want! If you like hashtags, use them. Let's see what happens.
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