Atkins Diet For Web Pages - Diet Your Way To Quick Loading! - Speed up your pages!
By: Thomas Jenkins
Do your visitors have to wait an age before
they can view any of the content on your site? The
problem is most people won’t “wait an age”,
they will simply click off your site and if you are
trying to run a business then this can be disastrous!
Good web design is a balancing act between content
rich, graphically pleasing sites and loading times.
As Internet connections get faster we cannot become
complacent and think that we can stop worrying about
loading times, because people will expect loading
times to be even quicker as they upgrade their Internet
connection and may click off your site after a shorter
than usual period of waiting.
“I recommend putting your site on the @kins
Diet!”
Okay, so we have established how important a quick
loading site is, but how can we shorten lengthy loading
times. Well, I recommend putting your site on the
@kins Diet! Remove all the excess; lengthy video clips,
background music and unnecessarily bulky images. As
with any good diet, you shouldn’t good cold turkey
and omit all these things - just as our body needs
a range of nutrients, a good web page needs a range
of media. Long pages of endless text may load quickly,
but they don’t exactly speak good web design.
“Communicate with your visitors!”
Another rule of the @kins diet is that you should
spread out the media in your site, don’t eat
all your junk food ration in one day i.e. don’t
put all the largest images on one page and if you
do feel like you need to do this, then don’t,
again DO NOT, put all these files on the index page.
Put them in a gallery page (Top Tip: use thumbnail
images in galleries), that has a warning of lengthy
loading times. Communicate with your visitors! The
reason most click off is because they think that there
is something wrong with the page, or worse, their
computer! You can save them and you so much trouble
by just leaving them a little note saying something
like, “Please wait. Images Loading… Thank
you.” on the page that is loading. Or a rollover
advice text that tells them that the page they are
about to click on has a lengthy loading time.
“cut the bulky images into smaller chunks”
Sites with loads of images are the ones that tend
to take longest to load. The Bigger the imager, the
longer it takes to load the image. Solution: reduce
the size of the image. This isn’t always possible,
I understand that. There are other ways, try slicing
the image. For those of you that don’t know,
this is like eating little and often, rather than
having heavy meals - cut the bulky images into smaller
chunks and then place them back together. This will
definitely aid loading times and as parts of the image
will be seen by the viewer, they will at least know
something is happening. Also look at the format of
the images, .bmp images will take longer to load than
.jpg or .gif - These are like diet foods, which don’t
always taste as good as the original. The same sort
of thing applies here, unless you use a good image
editor then the quality of the image can be degraded
on conversion.
Okay, so in summary the @kins diet recommends smaller
images, rather than larger ones. When you definitely
need to have a larger image, break it down into more
manageable chunks and format it correctly. Most importantly
of all, cut out the useless content that adds nothing
to your design overall!
About the Author:
Visit Thomas Jenkins at JKomp.com.