Well I'm not completely, and I'm not a surfing speed freak, but I don't like wasting my time. People discuss the merits of browsers ad infinitum, talking about minor differences in speed. Surfing speed could be quadrupled and bandwidth reduced to 1/4 overnight. The remedy - force sites to limit their pages sizes.
Many, if not most, commercial sites have web pages in the size range 500kB to 1MB. Yes, they really are that size. On top of that are numerous scripts going on in the background. Reduce that to 125kB and you are in business. Want to see a quick site? Try epguides.com, main page 28kB with all files. Almost zero crap.
What do you get for your Megabytes? Pretty effects; annoying effects; people collecting information about you to make money for themselves; layers of pages to reach what you want; a tedious experience.
People surf without thought as to what is going on in front of their faces. Popups are not such a big deal but get the lion's share of attention. Commercial sites have no interest in speeding up your experience. They want you there as long as possible. There may be limits that surfers will endure (15 seconds for a page to load used to be a yardstick) but that's it.
I complained to one major vendor about their weekly flyers. Page curl effects? Give me a break I want to see what's on sale. The vendor introduced dial-up pages later (nothing to do with my protests I'm sure). They are about 5% smaller than the broadband pages, whoopee.
Instead of being good mindless consumers, surfers should do something about it, like complain to the vendors (not the web site designers). Rather than force some legislation, have some sort of site seal of approval , "Surf-Fast" or whatever. If those appeared in Google or Yahoo searches it may influence site design and then we're surfing at real speed.
Many, if not most, commercial sites have web pages in the size range 500kB to 1MB. Yes, they really are that size. On top of that are numerous scripts going on in the background. Reduce that to 125kB and you are in business. Want to see a quick site? Try epguides.com, main page 28kB with all files. Almost zero crap.
What do you get for your Megabytes? Pretty effects; annoying effects; people collecting information about you to make money for themselves; layers of pages to reach what you want; a tedious experience.
People surf without thought as to what is going on in front of their faces. Popups are not such a big deal but get the lion's share of attention. Commercial sites have no interest in speeding up your experience. They want you there as long as possible. There may be limits that surfers will endure (15 seconds for a page to load used to be a yardstick) but that's it.
I complained to one major vendor about their weekly flyers. Page curl effects? Give me a break I want to see what's on sale. The vendor introduced dial-up pages later (nothing to do with my protests I'm sure). They are about 5% smaller than the broadband pages, whoopee.
Instead of being good mindless consumers, surfers should do something about it, like complain to the vendors (not the web site designers). Rather than force some legislation, have some sort of site seal of approval , "Surf-Fast" or whatever. If those appeared in Google or Yahoo searches it may influence site design and then we're surfing at real speed.