Veronica (search engine)

Veronica was a search engine system for the Gopher protocol, released in November 1992[1] by Steven Foster and Fred Barrie at the University of Nevada, Reno.[2]

During its existence, Veronica was a constantly updated database of the names of almost every menu item on thousands of Gopher servers. The Veronica database could be searched from most major Gopher menus. Although by 1999 the original Veronica database was no longer accessible,[3] various local Veronica installations and at least one complete rewrite ("Veronica-2") still exist.[4]

The existence of Veronica induced another Gopher search tool from the University of Utah originally called Jughead.[2] While the two were separate search tools, a Jughead instance could be configured with a veronica control file in order to let the Veronica harvester know how to obtain the data file from Jughead.[5]

  1. ^ "Navigating the Internet - Penn Printout, Feb 1993". upenn.edu. Archived from the original on August 22, 2018.
  2. ^ a b Doctorow, Cory (2020-02-21). "Gopher: When Adversarial Interoperability Burrowed Under the Gatekeepers' Fortresses". Electronic Frontier Foundation. Archived from the original on 2020-02-21. Retrieved 2024-07-21.
  3. ^ Lee, Christopher (Cal) (1999-04-23). "Where Have all the Gophers Gone? Why the Web beat Gopher in the Battle for Protocol Mind Share". ils.unc.edu. Archived from the original on 2007-06-07. Retrieved 2024-07-21.
  4. ^ Smith, Ernie (2017-08-01). "Long Live Gopher: The Techies Keeping the Text-Driven Internet Alive". Vice. Archived from the original on 2020-10-19. Retrieved 2024-07-20.
  5. ^ "Veronica FAQ (Part 1 of 2)". www.ou.edu. Q11. Archived from the original on 1999-01-16. Retrieved 2024-07-21.