Not exact matches
Americans are
slow to adapt and are defly afraid of change, see how the african american community is stiill only allowed to vote under the voting rights act of 1965 (that's right, it
still not a law) Why are they not up in arms,,,,, «yet we have a black president... maybe you can take a
page from their book (passive aggression).
Every users home
page also shows a random list of live cam feeds from different users - which although it makes the
page load a bit
slower than normal, is
still a fun, frivolous, and very frequently used feature.
This helped (a lot), but it was
still determined by when visitors to the site requested the update (including bots) by visiting the
page, meaning that there would be bursts of requests causing overload and
slowing things down.
Note that the site is
still being worked on and some
pages are a bit
slow to load so be patient.
Unlike the Kindle Fire HD, this Kindle Fire is
still dependent on the crowded 2.4 GHz band, which makes for
slower Internet speeds; when we've tested 2.4 GHz against 5 GHz devices on networks with fast backhaul, we've found that 5 GHz offers faster Web
page loads and clearer streaming video.
But it's
still expensive to manufacture, only available in black and white, and suffers from
slow screen refresh rates which affect things like scrolling and video (not possible currently), and leads to the annoying flash seen when turning
pages on ebook readers.
The replacement has had no crashes, and has a more solid power switch (the first one was «wiggly») but
still has
slow page turns.
Otherwise, the device appeared to respond relatively quickly, with reasonably fast
page turns that may
still be a bit
slower than the latest Kindle Paperwhite.
The nook
page transition is
slower, but doesn't have the flash of black which I
still haven't gotten use to yet after reading 2 books.
True, the speed gripe is par for the course with e-ink-based e-book readers; all of them
still stutter and flash when moving from
page to
page and generally have
slow start - up times after a full shutdown (as the Nook does).
Touchscreen responsiveness - after a couple of hard - resets - is much improved, as is WiFi stability, but
page turns in the Reader and Library apps are
still too
slow.
I've just started experimenting with reading the OR's on my iPad — the
page loading when on 3G (as opposed to wireless access) is a bit
slow, but it's
still better than being tied to my computer.
Keep in mind that intent of the search query is
still a very strong signal, so a
slow page may
still rank highly if it has great, relevant content.
Performance seemed a little smoother on the Android side overall, but
still a little
slow while browsing heavy
pages.