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Fostering a Web Performance Culture

Jos

There was something gratifying in taking a code that takes minutes to run and make it run in a handful seconds. Normally the team decides how well to cover and test the code, and it’s important that all developers in a team know how to write tests. In fact, Stockholm was the first city in installing 4G back in 2009.

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How Improving Website Performance Can Help Save The Planet

Smashing Magazine

Since 2009, Greenpeace has been putting pressure on big Internet companies to clean up their energy mix by way of their Clicking Clean campaign. This represents a relatively meager saving, but by establishing a philosophy of pruning unwanted code and requests from our pages, we can make much more significant performance improvements.

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Node vs React Comparison: Which to Choose for Your JS Project?

Enprowess

framework was launched in 2009, and it destroyed the traditional browser confined limits of JS. has a unit testing framework called Jasmine, which allows unit testing of code during development. It makes code very easy to understand and launch. Stable code: With downward data flow, React.js Caching of individual modules.

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Performance Toolbelt: Page Speed

Tim Kadlec

Like it’s older brother YSlow, Page Speed , released by Google in in mid-2009, is primarily a tool to audit and analyze the performance of your site. Each rule is given a priority code based on how great the potential impact would be on the page load time. Leverage browser caching. Leverage proxy caching.

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Converting a Ghost blog to a Progressive Web App

Dean Hume

I’ve recently updated this blog and moved it from a custom ASP.NET website that has been running since about 2009 to Ghost CMS. I wanted the site to be super fast - once someone has read an article that won’t change, why not serve it from the cached version on their device. I then added the following code to the service worker file.

Cache 40
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Converting a Ghost blog to a Progressive Web App

Dean Hume

I’ve recently updated this blog and moved it from a custom ASP.NET website that has been running since about 2009 to Ghost CMS. I wanted the site to be super fast - once someone has read an article that won’t change, why not serve it from the cached version on their device. I then added the following code to the service worker file.

Cache 40
article thumbnail

Converting a Ghost blog to a Progressive Web App

Dean Hume

I’ve recently updated this blog and moved it from a custom ASP.NET website that has been running since about 2009 to Ghost CMS. I wanted the site to be super fast - once someone has read an article that won’t change, why not serve it from the cached version on their device. I then added the following code to the service worker file.

Cache 40