There is some exploration at the site itself that is worth looking through if anyone plans to attempt LaTeX markdown being interpreted-and-served.
The Unix Philosophy in me thinks "use lynx. oh and forget https, use gopher to serve. when you hit a .tex switch to a program that's supposed to do that" etc etc etc but I definitely think the entirety of the internetworkings - i.e. not-exclusive-to-hackers - would benefit from *TeX markdown being as common as HTML (perhaps not AS common, but more common than currently).
https://www.maths.nottingham.ac.uk/plp/pmadw/lm.html
There is some exploration at the site itself that is worth looking through if anyone plans to attempt LaTeX markdown being interpreted-and-served.
The Unix Philosophy in me thinks "use lynx. oh and forget https, use gopher to serve. when you hit a .tex switch to a program that's supposed to do that" etc etc etc but I definitely think the entirety of the internetworkings - i.e. not-exclusive-to-hackers - would benefit from *TeX markdown being as common as HTML (perhaps not AS common, but more common than currently).