FAQ

Common questions about Gem Show Radar.

A clearer explanation of what Gem Show Radar is, who it is for, where the public feature direction is headed next, and what people should expect from early access.

What is Gem Show Radar?

Gem Show Radar is a public show-discovery website focused on helping people find gem, mineral, fossil, and jewelry shows more easily and keep up with the show circuit over time.

Is this only a plain event list?

No. The larger direction is stronger than a plain list. Gem Show Radar is being shaped to support better browsing, more useful public show pages, saved-show direction, and future show-alert value.

Who is the site for?

Collectors, dealers, organizers, families, and enthusiasts can all benefit from a cleaner public path for finding and following legitimate shows.

Why does the site emphasize following the show circuit?

Because many people return to the same events, watch for future dates, and compare upcoming weekends. Gem Show Radar is being built around the reality that show discovery is ongoing, not just one-time lookup.

Will there be support for saved shows later?

That is part of the approved direction. The site is meant to make it easier to keep track of worthwhile events and return to the shows you care about.

Will there be show alerts?

Future show-alert value is part of the direction as well. The goal is to make it easier to hear about useful updates, future dates, and worthwhile shows without depending on scattered sources.

How does this help dealers or organizers?

Dealers benefit from stronger public event discovery and organizers benefit from better public findability for legitimate shows. The public surface matters to both groups.

How can I hear about launch updates?

You can join the early access list to hear about launch timing, future feature direction, and public-discovery improvements.

What kinds of updates should early access members expect?

Early access should focus on launch updates, important public feature direction, and audience-relevant discovery improvements rather than unrelated email.

Why are there separate pages for collectors and for dealers and organizers?

Because different audiences care about different kinds of discovery help. The separate pages make the public direction easier to understand from each point of view.