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<title>Public marks from user kasi77 with tags optimisation &amp; groupe:clever-age</title>
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<title>Best Practices for Speeding Up Your Web Site</title>
<link>http://developer.yahoo.com/performance/rules.html</link>
<description>High Performance Web Sites: The Importance of Front-End Performance

In 2004, I started the Exceptional Performance group at Yahoo!. We're a small team chartered to measure and improve the performance of Yahoo!'s products. Having worked as a back-end engineer most of my career, I approached this as I would a code optimization project - I profiled web performance to identify where there was the greatest opportunity for improvement. Since our goal is to improve the end-user experience, I measured response times in a browser over various bandwidth speeds. What I saw is illustrated in the following chart showing HTTP traffic for http://www.yahoo.com.</description>
<dc:date>2008-03-30T22:23:11Z</dc:date>
<dc:author>kasi77</dc:author>
<dc:subject>website, code, optimisation, yahoo, groupe:clever-age, front-end</dc:subject>
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<a href="http://developer.yahoo.com/performance/rules.html"><img border="0" src="http://blogmarks.net/screenshots/2009/06/11/e99bd7ec58232265caeab544b452f71a.jpg" alt="" /></a>
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<h4><a class="taggedlink" href="http://developer.yahoo.com/performance/rules.html">Best Practices for Speeding Up Your Web Site</a></h4>
 
by <a href="http://blogmarks.net/user/kasi77">kasi77</a> 
 &amp; <a class="public" href="http://blogmarks.net/link/2378275">12 other(s)</a> 
<p class="description">High Performance Web Sites: The Importance of Front-End Performance

In 2004, I started the Exceptional Performance group at Yahoo!. We're a small team chartered to measure and improve the performance of Yahoo!'s products. Having worked as a back-end engineer most of my career, I approached this as I would a code optimization project - I profiled web performance to identify where there was the greatest opportunity for improvement. Since our goal is to improve the end-user experience, I measured response times in a browser over various bandwidth speeds. What I saw is illustrated in the following chart showing HTTP traffic for http://www.yahoo.com.</p>
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<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/website">website</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/code">code</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/optimisation">optimisation</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/yahoo">yahoo</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/groupe%253Aclever-age">groupe:clever-age</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/front-end">front-end</a>
</p>
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