Not only
do page load speeds greater than 3 seconds lead to reduced conversion rates, fewer page views, and a worse user experience, Google actually takes page speed into account now when ranking results.
Not exact matches
Amazon Silk is very intelligently designed — not only
does it lower the price of the Kindle Fire by minimizing its hardware requirements, it also
speeds up
page load times, and even learns your behavior and pre-loads the
pages you visit the most when you're connected to the internet.
Range is decent but the one thing I've noticed is the browser can not keep up with the Wi - Fi
speeds and
pages do tend to
load slower than expected but far faster than if you weren't on Wi - Fi.
When they
did load,
page turn
speed was fast.
The Kindle Fire also features Amazon's new «Silk» Web browser, which uses Amazon's EC2 cloud service to
speed up
page loading (and yes, it
does run Flash).
However, Sony has
done some clever tweaking to the browser, so the
page loading speeds are faster than you might expect and set alongside our Motorola Xoom, it
loaded pages faster.
Not only
do visitors drop off with slow
page -
load times, but Google and other search engines consider
speed a factor in ranking your website in search results.
I mean, I know this is effectively censorship of anyone that isn't willing or able to make a deal with the telecom companies to have their
pages load at the same
speed as these media giants» sites... but that doesn't affect me because I believe these conglomerate monopolies have my best interests at heart and definitely aren't just trying to make the most money for their shareholders.
The E4 Plus isn't particularly fast when it comes to
loading web
pages in Chrome, but switching between tabs is quick enough, and running multiple apps at once doesn't have a noticeable effect on the phone's
speed.
Your web browser is constantly
doing this with bits of different web
pages, and it
speeds up web
page loading because your browser doesn't have to download the same files over and over.