gopher
&Lauri.Watts; &Lauri.Watts.mail;
gopher began as a distributed campus information service
at the University of Minnesota. Gopher allows the user to access information
on Gopher servers running on Internet hosts.
Gopher is an Internet information browsing service that uses a menu-driven
interface. Users select information from menus, which may return another
menu or display a text file. An item may reside on a Gopher server you
originally queried, or it may be on another Gopher server (or another host).
Gopher can tunnel
from one Gopher to another without the
user knowing that the server and/or host machine have changed. Gopher keeps
the exact location of computers hidden from the user, providing the
illusion
of a single, large set of interconnected menus.
Gopher permits the user to record an item's location in a
bookmark
thereby allowing users to follow a
bookmark
directly to a particular item without
searching the menu system. Gopher menus are not standardized, inasmuch as
each Gopher server is individually determined.
Source:
http://tlc.nlm.nih.gov/resources/tutorials/internetdistlrn/gophrdef.htm