public marks

PUBLIC MARKS with tags navigateur & performance

2013

Browser Diet

by dzc & 2 others
How to lose weight (in the browser) And what if we got together a bunch of experts who work on large sites to create a definitive front-end performance guide?

Browser Diet

by emmanuelc & 2 others
How to lose weight (in the browser) And what if we got together a bunch of experts who work on large sites to create a definitive front-end performance guide?

2010

Flash contre HTML5 : 3, 2, 1 partez !

by nhoizey
"Le plus économe demeure le couple Safari/HTML5 qui ne consomme que 12 % des ressources processeur. Pour effectuer la même tâche, le duo Safari/Flash s’accapare 37 % du temps processeur"

High Performance Web Sites :: Browser Performance Wishlist

by dzc
What are the most important changes browsers could make to improve performance? This document is my answer to that question. This is mainly for browser developers, although web developers will want to track the adoption of these improvements.

LABjs :: Loading And Blocking JavaScript

by dzc & 2 others
LABjs (Loading And Blocking JavaScript) is an open-source (MIT license) project. on-demand JavaScript loader, capable of loading any JavaScript resource, from any location, into any page, at any time. LABjs by default will load (and execute) all scripts in parallel as fast as the browser will allow. However, you can easily specify which scripts have execution order dependencies and LABjs will ensure proper execution order. This makes LABjs safe to use for virtually any JavaScript resource, whether you control/host it or not, and whether it is standalone or part of a larger dependency tree of resources. It uses an expressive, chaining API to specify which scripts to load, and when to wait ("block"), if necessary, for execution before proceeding with further execution.

namebench

by nhoizey
amebench hunts down the fastest DNS servers available for your computer to use

2009

Overcome Your Caching Conundrums [Server Side Essentials]

by dzc
ealing with browser caching is a balancing act. On one hand, you aim to minimize load times and bandwidth use by ensuring that images, scripts, and style sheets are cached by your visitors; however, you still want to ensure that they’re accessing the most recent versions of all your files. In this article, I’ll show you a few methods for controlling how your site’s files are cached by browsers so you can achieve the best of both worlds: maintaining optimal performance while ensuring that any updates are seen immediately, without a hitch by all of your users.

2008

2007

PUBLIC TAGS related to tag navigateur

[en] +   conception web +   css +   Environnement +   firefox +   html +   html5 +   ie +   ie6 +   ie7 +   ie8 +   ie9 +   layout +   layout engines +   navigateur web +   à voir +   Standard du Web +   standards +   support +   test +   video +   w3c +   web +   webdesign +   webmaster +   xhtml +  

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dzc
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