Fired up the 8088 today, to see how my different gopher real estate works in a vintage environment. The WATTCP version of Gopher works, but not well, especially on my SDF gopher hole, which is still php/script based, rather than actual files for end points. The UMN "Minuet" suite worked quite well, on all my gopher holes, and all of the others I tested. Since it functions properly, and is actual vintage software on vintage hardware, I'm going to say that things are "good enough." Still, I want to re-work my SDF site, so that important things are actual text files. Then I'll work with more gopher clients. It might sound like a pointless exercise, but I located sdf, and grex, through an old gopher client, so I feel that there is some merit in having a clean, functional, proper gopher hole. Now I just have to do it. Eventually. I want to say a few words about Minuet while I'm at it. For an old piece of software, I really enjoyed using it. It uses the old Borland-C-Style multi-window interface, which supports both text and graphical modes. On the 8088 I stick with the text modes, even though I do have a VGA card in there, because it's much faster. 24 and 43/50 column are supported. The software lets you do several things at once, including Gopher, FTP, HTTP (poorly supported), and Telnet. There are some windowed utilities as well, such as a calculator and calendar. It also has finger, which is functional in my limited testing. All in all, for a slow computer running DOS, it's the kind of software that makes you feel like you can actually be a little productive, even in today's fast-paced-computing world. It was pleasant, and I was able to pretty easily read up on the phlogs that I like to follow.