Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by chromas on Saturday February 16 2019, @04:44AM   Printer-friendly
from the free-content-is-paid-for-by-wasting-your-life-on-loading-times dept.

BBC:

Ads are responsible for making webpages slow to a crawl, suggests analysis of the most popular one million websites.

The research by developer Patrick Hulce looked at which chunks of code take longest to load.

About 60% of the total loading time of a page was caused by scripts that place adverts or analyse what users do, he found.

Not news for most Soylentils, but in case anyone needs to cite the performance hit (to convince PHBs)...


Original Submission

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 3, Informative) by stretch611 on Saturday February 16 2019, @05:31PM (2 children)

    by stretch611 (6199) on Saturday February 16 2019, @05:31PM (#802100)

    Sadly, Opera has been sold [digitaltrends.com]. (I would have linked to the story atengadget [engadget.com], but seeing how their awful site breaks without javascript, I thought a different site would be better with this article.

    However, their is a spirtual successor to Opera, Vivaldi [vivaldi.com].

    Sadly, like everything else (except firefox), it is a chromium based browser. Which is going to end up being as ugly as the IE6 domination of the web 2 decades ago.

    --
    Now with 5 covid vaccine shots/boosters altering my DNA :P
    Starting Score:    1  point
    Moderation   +1  
       Informative=1, Total=1
    Extra 'Informative' Modifier   0  
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   3  
  • (Score: 3, Informative) by RS3 on Saturday February 16 2019, @06:58PM (1 child)

    by RS3 (6367) on Saturday February 16 2019, @06:58PM (#802129)

    Thanks. I quite agree about the newer "Opera". I specified "Old Opera", which is a fairly commonly used designation for up to version 12.18, based on the "Presto" rendering engine. 12.18 is great for most websites. Some with horrific code errors (as per validator.w3.org) can freeze it up, or just not render things the way they were intended to look, but overall it's still my main browser.

    In fact, I'm writing this using Vivaldi and have been for 2+ years (IIRC). It's much much better than Chrome (ugh). We have the per-site javascript, etc. settings, but it's overall responsiveness is slowwww (on the same hardware as Opera 12.18 which is snappy).

    Blockers are our friends.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 17 2019, @08:33PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 17 2019, @08:33PM (#802608)

      Just so you know, Chromium's core has per-site control over all of that too, it is just hidden by default in the settings. Vivaldi and Chrome use the same control interface to disable that stuff.