no problems here. normal 6MB cable internet and takes only 2 seconds for the page to load up. if you have problems loading the page then it's time to upgrade your internet connection. i personally, as a web designer, like the idea of pages that expire fast to make sure the page is not loading from cache.
My download speed just tested out at 2.36 Mbps and digg loads in a about 2 seconds. I cleared out my cache as well.Ebay and nonags.com load slower but by a eyelash.
Google has a nice little tool that will convert any web page to PDA format. I've actually been using this to browse digg on both my Treo 700w & my desktop. It improves load time quite a bit, especially if you use the option to kill images...<a class="user" href="http://www.google.com/gwt/n">http://www.google.com/gwt/n</a>
Just a thoughtHow about the browser companies get with the times and load their own scripts in the application to handle stuff like Ajax, menus, and other common features. Scripts can then just reference these libraries. There would be alot less downloading and alot more web page functionality. Why does every web developer have to create their own Ajax, menu, slider javascript libraries.
@retroUhh... that's what javascript is... a bunch of librarys we can reference. You don't need to load a huge library to use Ajax technics. My personal "Ajax" (God I hate that term!) library is 8 lines long. You develop towards what you need. If you understand less about it, perhaps you need a bigger library to simplify it for you. If the only way you can figure out how to use dhtml & ajax calls is by writing a few hundred lines of code, that's your own issue.
reetsJan 28, 2006
no problems here. normal 6MB cable internet and takes only 2 seconds for the page to load up. if you have problems loading the page then it's time to upgrade your internet connection. i personally, as a web designer, like the idea of pages that expire fast to make sure the page is not loading from cache.
chaos12Jan 28, 2006
Digg loads instantly for me on my 10mbps :O
odo08Jan 29, 2006
My download speed just tested out at 2.36 Mbps and digg loads in a about 2 seconds. I cleared out my cache as well.Ebay and nonags.com load slower but by a eyelash.
webhead74Jan 29, 2006
Google has a nice little tool that will convert any web page to PDA format. I've actually been using this to browse digg on both my Treo 700w & my desktop. It improves load time quite a bit, especially if you use the option to kill images...<a class="user" href="http://www.google.com/gwt/n">http://www.google.com/gwt/n</a>
retroJan 29, 2006
Just a thoughtHow about the browser companies get with the times and load their own scripts in the application to handle stuff like Ajax, menus, and other common features. Scripts can then just reference these libraries. There would be alot less downloading and alot more web page functionality. Why does every web developer have to create their own Ajax, menu, slider javascript libraries.
bryanthecrowJan 30, 2006
@retroUhh... that's what javascript is... a bunch of librarys we can reference. You don't need to load a huge library to use Ajax technics. My personal "Ajax" (God I hate that term!) library is 8 lines long. You develop towards what you need. If you understand less about it, perhaps you need a bigger library to simplify it for you. If the only way you can figure out how to use dhtml & ajax calls is by writing a few hundred lines of code, that's your own issue.
shrekyMar 15, 2006
Website using Ajax effectivelyphpnuke themes, phpnuke tutorials, phpnuke modules<a class="user" href="http://www.westernstudios.net">http://www.westernstudios.net</a>