With the mobile - first index, will desktop rankings use
mobile page speed and not use desktop page speed?
The best practice is always to redirect smartphone users to the equivalent
mobile page for the content they are looking for.
If the content exists on the desktop version of the page but not the
corresponding mobile page, the site could lose rankings and search traffic related to the missing content.
I asked Google about whether these changes would have any impact
on mobile pages that also have AMP versions.
FindLaw's white paper dives into the sometimes complex world
of mobile page speed.
Google this week announced that it would be switching to a mobile - first search index, rewarding well optimized
mobile pages with better search...
ESPN's
mobile page took around 10 seconds to load, and the full New York Times page took nearly 30 seconds — 10 seconds more than on the iPhone.
«ABC News»
mobile page views have grown over 50 % each month since 2011 and our expansion to the Kindle Fire is the next step in growing our tablet user base».
Yes, I plan on putting together a video of web browsing on the PRS - T1 and Kindle 4, but first I need to create a
new mobile page for each on this site that is setup with a bunch of helpful links for free ebooks and such.
Clear up the confusion
around mobile page speed with Seconds Matter: The Real - world Risks of a Slow Mobile Website.
One criticism from some open - web advocates is that AMP represents a step backward for the mobile web, back to the days when there were
customized mobile pages designed for WAP browsers that restricted what publishers could do.
The result, Abrams said, is a site that loads an order of magnitude faster than the
typical mobile page.
To further convince you of site speed's importance, Google has announced that
mobile page load speed will be incorporated as a ranking factor.
The biggest mistakes are
slow mobile pages, mobile - only 404 errors, blocked CSS / JavasScript / image files, faulty redirects, cross-links that don't make sense, and unplayable content to name just a few.
Starting in July 2018, Google will finally
use mobile page speed as a ranking in their mobile search results.
Hit up the link below to see the same search results we found while the T -
Mobile page lasts.
The posting seems to have been quickly removed, and the global
LG Mobile page on Facebook has now cleared up the matter:
«AMP» is standard for webpages that are radically faster than
existing mobile pages, almost entirely supported by Google.
In February 2016, it began to highlight AMP sites (pages using its Accelerated
Mobile Page technology to speed up mobile rendering) in search results, and then in April 2016 gave AMP pages a more prominent position in Google News.
In particular, avoid annotating many desktop pages referring to a
single mobile page (or vice versa).
Boost Mobile alerted its customers of the change earlier today by SMS, and pointed its customers to this 4G
Boost Mobile page with plenty of questions and answers.
Paul Haahr from Google reiterated it by saying, «Index
of mobile pages for mobile users and index of desktop pages for desktop users won't happen.»
Mobile page speed may sound intimidating or confusing, but there are steps you can take without a computer science degree to test how your site stacks up.
SimilarWeb puts together a monthly ranking of the largest U.S. media companies and publishers, and the latest one has MSN at the top with almost 2 billion desktop and
mobile page - views.
Use the Google Developer's Page Speed Insight Tools to find out more information and make your website as fast as it can be — which is a must for viewing on
a mobile page.
That includes everything from Facebook's Instant Articles initiative — which was followed by the new Notify alert app introduced this week — to Google's «accelerated
mobile pages» project, Twitter Moments, Apple News and Snapchat Discover.
Google Releases Mobile Scorecard & Impact Calculator Tools To Illustrate Importance Of
Mobile Page Speed Google continues to reinforce the importance of mobile page speed.
Recent and repeated visits to
the mobile pages for other leading House and Senate candidates (using both an iPhone 4s and an iPhone 5) found more than half had trouble spots — from cluttered sites designed to be viewed on a much larger device like a laptop or desktop to multiple - step fundraising forms that can discourage a potential donor from hitting the final send button.
The Google's latest Accelerated Mobile Pages speeds up the delivery for
mobile pages to load in less than one second.
I thought they would have the White Nexus 6s at the underground page when I saw it listed there but nope just takes you to regular T -
mobile page: -LRB-
Now, there is no option for
the mobile page, and it does not go automatically... Can someone help?
Improving
your mobile page speed is what will actually make a difference.
Join us for a webcast to learn just what factors influence your website's
mobile page speed, what tools and benchmarks are available to help evaluate the elements that drive website speed (or slow it down), and what you can do to boost your site's performance.
According to Bryan McQuade (head of Google's Page Speed team), you should work to make
your mobile pages render in under one second.
Sometimes, however,
the mobile page has less content than the desktop page, which can cause the system to be less accurate.
Google's John Mueller said on Twitter that «
mobile pages should be fully equivalent in content & functionality regardless of indexing.»
Google's Page Speed Update won't impact how Google indexes your mobile or desktop content; it will only affect how
the mobile pages are ranked in the Google mobile search results.
When using rel =» alternate» and rel =» canonical» markup, maintain a 1 - to - 1 ratio between
the mobile page and the corresponding desktop page.
If you have removed markup from
the mobile pages in order to speed up load time, you will need to add that back to the mobile page, otherwise you will eventually lose those rich snippets once Google changes over to the mobile first index.
But when it comes to
mobile pages, Gary Illyes notes that these things are often created for the user and not the search engines, like what happens on desktop.
It is important to note that if you use less content on the mobile version of a page, once Google changes over to the mobile first index, you will only be able to rank for the content that appears on
the mobile page.
The speed of
your mobile pages currently doesn't impact your mobile rankings, but soon it may, says Gary Illyes of...
Pages are pre-loaded for faster results, but Cake tells us it's not serving Google AMP - based pages (Google's accelerated
mobile pages).