Fast Loading Pages - WebReference Update - 020801
((((((((((((((((( WEBREFERENCE UPDATE NEWSLETTER ))))))))))))))))) August 1, 2002
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This week we feature an open publishing article on Net speed by Richard Tibbett. Making your pages load quickly will keep them coming back for more. Ironically, today's edition is a long one, but I think you'll find that it is worth it. Wait, don't bail out on me now!
In other voices Digital Web Magazine reviews Photoshop 7, O'Reilly looks at Microsoft's Mac FUD, and congrats to fellow Ann-Arborites Lou Rosenfeld and Peter Morville for completing the second edition of their now-classic "Information Architecture for the World Wide Web." The book will be available later this month but you can preview it now on the companion site.
In other news IBM gives Honda a voice with an improved ViaVoice, and AOL previews AOL 8, a 'fat client.' Hey, you've got mail!
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New this week on WebReference.com and the Web:
1. FEATURE: Fast Loading Pages: A Fresh Look at Internet Speed 2. OTHER VOICES: * Adobe Photoshop 7 Review * Microsoft Mac FUD * (Over)simple Answers for Simple Minds * Information Architecture for the World Wide Web, 2nd Ed. 3. NET NEWS: * IBM gives Honda a voice * Google aboard, AOL offers peek at 8.0 * AOL's New Beta is 'Fat' with Graphics
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1. Fast Loading Pages: A Fresh Look at Internet Speed
No matter who you are, be it a large multinational business or a local hobbyist, you will most probably have a web site that you have invested a large amount of time and/or money in to attract as many visitors as is humanly possible. More and more sites are developing rich web content in order to increase their visitor quota and as the content grows, the sizes of your web pages may inflate as well. Is it subsequently all too much for your lowly 56K modem visitors to handle?
* Let's face the music...
Having built your web site, added your content and attracted a steady stream of visitors are you still not seeing results? Are your pages taking longer than 10 seconds to download on a 56.6kbps modem? The harsh facts are then, that you are losing anywhere from 10% to 25% of your visitors because your site has been deemed as 'sluggish' by those passing through (and straight back out of) it. Why make visitors wait for your pages to download if you are offering rich content that would appeal to them should they reach it?
"Waiting for content to load is just behind spam in most users' top ten hates about the Web." - WebReference Newsletter (Mar 28, 2002)
* Technology and the Psychology of the Common Man
Behind the technology of the Internet is the psychology of its users. Drawing from my personal experience, a web site that took 78 seconds and presented only one relevant page later will always be perceived as inferior to a competitors' site that I could handle with greater agility and personal satisfaction.
Everybody has had the same experience at some point on the web and this superiority and inferiority rating between yours and competitors sites is being judged by your visitors in every market sector and every interest area in every time zone of the world. The flood of personal home pages, that dwarf business pages at a ratio of 15:1, sometimes unfortunately present 'the artist formerly known as MIDI' and around 3% of that 249K GIF image by the time I click back to where I came from. Unfortunate is the fact that many business sites are employing the same bandwidth eating components as these home pages and, to be blunt, it is not big and it is definitely not clever.
Here's the 'acid test,' if you like, for testing your site download speeds as described by Jason Cook of WebMonkey:
"Find a two-year-old computer and connect it to a phone line. Dial into AOL or another common ISP. Have your site's manager look on as the least technical person you can find in the office tries to download your pages and then your competitors' pages. Have the test driver surf back and forth between fast and slow pages. If this simple demo doesn't convince everyone that download time directly affects your site's "brand equity," as well as its page views, it's time to update your resume."
- Site Optimization Tutorial, WebMonkey
Alternatively, look at download speeds this way: visitors to your site will stay for an average of X amount of time before they move on to other sites and as Jacob Nielsen (www.useit.com), a web usability guru puts it, those pages viewed MUST download within 10 seconds to keep users attention on the task at hand. (No ifs and buts from the gallery should be necessary at the present time).
* Business @ the Speed of, well... Thought.
The classic example of the fast loading web site is Yahoo! (www.yahoo.com). Having navigated to the news site of Yahoo you are almost instantly presented with the news summary page. You can visit 10 content pages in the time it took to visit 4 on a previous site because it only takes 5 seconds to download each one and you have only spent 20 (as opposed to 78) seconds downloading the first 4 pages. Yahoo is an extremely 'content rich' web site and its main aim is to deliver this content to visitors as quickly as possible. Believe it or not, it took over 20 designers to create the current Yahoo web page template and the home page still remains relatively unchanged since its beginnings in the mid-nineties.
Should it be your priority to engage the visitor in your web site so that they do not have a second to think of moving on? YES OF COURSE IT SHOULD, and at many points Yahoo is like this, and it becomes intensely clear why Yahoo is the most visited web site in the World today and will continue to be in the near future. Yahoo is stickier than almost every other site and it focuses on giving its visitors what they want - Speed and Content in equal proportions. This is not to say that your web site needs to be a carbon-copy of Yahoo, but webmasters should focus on the balance between speed and content for optimum visitor satisfaction and return visits. Ask yourself these questions:
- Do I get the message of the web site after 5 seconds? 10 seconds? Longer? - Is your message all there on the home page? - Do you want your engaging news and articles to be diluted by something like download speeds if there was really something you could do about it? - Does your site really need that Flash navigation bar when a simple graphic bar would be just as effective?
* Web Site Optimization
Making your site fast is easy with a few simple steps. There are plenty of articles and tools related to this subject on the web today and a search on any of the major search engines will keep you busy for around a half hour. I personally recommend checking out NetMechanic (www.netmechanic.com) which will check amongst other things the download speeds for your web site, check your HTML code validity, Web Page Link Validity, and reduce your web image sizes for optimum performance. Consider the following points as a rule of thumb:
- Remove bandwidth eating add-ons that you don't absolutely NEED - Take out those small Flash Movies and Java Applets and put in a GIF or JPEG image instead. - Optimize all of your images - This means owning an image optimization program that will take your images and reduce the number of colors contained in its color palette. - Remove all unnecessary images and HTML code - Get in there and wade through your HTML code and remove all of those redundant commands. - If you can't beat 'em, join 'em - Study other web sites and see how they do it, read usability books and collect some of your own ideas to increase site download speeds. - Speed up your Server Response Rate - If you are the owner of your own web server, the book 'Client/Server Performance Tuning: Designing for Speed' by Sid Wise can be of great benefit. If you do not possess your own web server you will be limited as to the extent of tuning (if any) you can perform.
* Design for your *Audience* and *their* Machines
Page download speeds are as important as ever, even with the latest boom in Broadband Services. There are some countries and regions of the world that have never even heard of DSL and so, web sites should always be trying to expand their visitor quota in any way possible. Try to design to a 56.6kbps specification and even consider designing for 28.8kbps Internet users. In the process you will be claiming back that 10% to 25% of visitors that you lost in the past whilst also increasing your visitors satisfaction and return rate... starting now!
* Related Resources
Jacob Nielsen's Online Resource for IT Usability https://www.useit.com NetMechanic's HTML Toolbox - Improve ALL areas of your site https://www.netmechanic.com WebMonkey's Site Optimization Tutorial https://hotwired.lycos.com/webmonkey/98/26/index0a.html
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About the Author: Richard Tibbett is a writer specializing in current Internet and Electronic Commerce issues. Mr Tibbett is also the Managing Director of SiteXpress LTD an E-Commerce Systems company based in Middlesex, UK and has been working with the Internet since 1997. His site is at https://www.sitexpress.co.uk and he can be reached at [email protected].
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2. OTHER VOICES: Adobe Photoshop 7 Review, Microsoft Mac FUD, (Over)simple Answers for Simple Minds, Information Architecture for the World Wide Web, 2nd Edition
* Adobe Photoshop 7 Review
Jesse Nieminen gives a detailed review of Adobe's flagship. https://www.digital-web.com/reviews/product/review_2002-07b.shtml Digital Web Magazine, July 2002
* Microsoft Mac FUD
Tim O'Reilly investigates an alleged Microsoft threat to exit the Mac OS X market. Hat tip: Camworld.com. https://www.oreillynet.com/cs/weblog/view/wlg/1710 Tim O'Reilly, July 2002
* (Over)simple Answers for Simple Minds
George Olsen ponders the wisdom of simple-minded, absolutist approaches to complex problems of design and usability. Hat tip: Zeldman.com. https://www.boxesandarrows.com/archives/002811.php Boxes and Arrows, July 31, 2002
* Information Architecture for the World Wide Web, 2nd Edition
Congratulations to fellow Ann-Arborites Louis Rosenfeld and Peter Morville on completing the second edition of their classic info- architecture book. Revamped and revised the new edition will be available later this month. To preview the book, read one of four "beta" chapters on the companion site. https://www.oreilly.com/catalog/infotecture2/ O'Reilly.com, Aug. 2002
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3. NET NEWS: IBM gives Honda a voice, Google aboard, AOL offers peek at 8.0, AOL's New Beta is 'Fat' with Graphics
* IBM gives Honda a voice
IBM said on Monday it signed a deal with Honda Motor that will make it easier for drivers to find the closest gas station or restaurant by asking the car's computer for help. The voice recognition technology is based on an improved version of IBM's ViaVoice software. https://zdnet.com.com/2100-1104-946900.html ZDNet.com, July 29, 2002
* Google aboard, AOL offers peek at 8.0
America Online released on Wednesday a preview version of its upcoming AOL 8.0 service, slated for official release this fall. https://zdnet.com.com/2100-1104-947355.html ZDNet.com, July 31, 2002
* AOL's New Beta is 'Fat' with Graphics
In related news AOL's new beta version 8.0 of its e-mail client has been released to beta testers. The buzz is that it's a significant improvement featuring more personalization, more rich media and more room for ad units, with "more" being the operative phrase. 'Fat clients' allow better bandwidth usage for rich media ads, which AOL needs after a 42% decline in ad and commerce revenue for one quarter last year. https://www.internetnews.com/IAR/article.php/1435761 Internetnews.com, July
That's it for this Thursday, see you next time.
Andrew King Newsletter Editor, WebReference.com aking at internet dot com
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