I'm going through the throes of web development right now and am getting educated about the tradeoffs of size vs. load times for websites. Well, to be blunt, my better half said: Don't make your website slow - that's a drag!
She's smart - that's why I put that ring on her finger
haha.. so at any rate, I want to put cool things up for people but I don't want to make it slow.
Bottom line, help me not be a dingbat and give me some sense of what kind of internet connectivity you have so I know where to draw the line regarding size. Of course, most really big things just wind up getting put on youtube these days - but I'm talking about things like pictures of players and guitars and things in the process of getting built and such - which people tend to find interesting but which also tend to add up quickly and really slow things down so I want to be sensitive to that.
You get one chance to enjoy this day, but if you're doing it right, that's enough.
Comments
Craig Bumgarner
also some other ways to cut load time down are to use css files to style the site rather than html tables
optimise images in photoshop ( for example for photo type images use jpg compression and for images with less colors e.g. buttons use the gif file type etc. )
i've been working as a webdesigner for a few years so if you have any particular questions about optimising your site or anything else let me know
As far as videos go, you can down-encode them with SUPER (http://www.erightsoft.net/SUPER.html ) , to various different formats (I use Xvid+MP3 in a AVI container), to improve the efficiency of the content on your site.
The web optimization of photos is just freaky... 1/10 to 1/20 the size and they look about the same. I'd figured out how to drop them to ~ 1/2 size, but 1/10 and less.... that's just wild.
At any rate - thanks very much.
Slow page loads are a drag, but LOL it was not that long ago I had dial up...we got cable modem some years ago and it mostly is blazing fast.
Put this site up, Bob, we're waiting for it !!!