Performance Research, Part 2: Browser Cache Usage - Exposed! » Yahoo! User Interface Blog
This is the second in a series of articles describing experiments conducted to learn more about optimizing web page performance. You may be wondering why you’re reading a performance article on the YUI Blog. It turns out that most of web page performance is affected by front-end engineering, that is, the user interface design and development.
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| Name | Title | Rating | When | |
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| roxanne | Performance Research, Part 2: Browser Cache Usage - Expos... |
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January 30, 2008 | |
| Christine | Performance Research, Part 2: Browser Cache Usage - Expos... |
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August 13, 2007 | |
| leef_smith | Performance Research, Part 2: Browser Cache Usage - Expos... |
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April 10, 2007 | |
| malheiro | Performance Research, Part 2: Browser Cache Usage - Expos... |
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March 25, 2007 | |
Even if your assets are optimized for maximum caching, there are a significant number of users that will always have an empty cache. This goes back to the point that reducing the number of HTTP requests has the biggest impact on r... |
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| zelph | Performance Research, Part 2: Browser Cache Usage - Expos... |
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February 1, 2007 | |
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| Name | Title | Rating | When | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Front-end and back-end webdevelopment | Performance Research, Part 2: Browser Cache Usage - Expos... |
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January 10, 2007 |
