Tags / twitter:user=souders

Tagged with “twitter:user=souders” (2) activity chart

  1. Faster Mobile Anyone?

    Are your users happy with the speed of the mobile web experience you’re giving them? It’s true—mobile connections are slower. But that’s a crutch. You can’t change the speed of carrier networks, but you can change the way you build your mobile website. Identifying the bottlenecks and deploying the right solutions can make your mobile website twice as fast.

    Join Steve Souders as he presents the latest developments for analyzing mobile performance and creating a faster mobile experience.

    Presented by Steve Souders at the Breaking Development Conference held in September 2011 in Nashville, TN.

    —Huffduffed by bdconf one year ago

  2. Web Directions Podcast - Steve Souders - Even faster web sites

    Web 2.0 is adding more and more content to our pages, especially features that are implemented in Ajax. But our web applications are evolving faster than the browsers that they run in. We don’t have to rely on or wait for the release of new browsers to make our web applications faster. In this session, Steve Souders discusses web performance best practices from his second book, Even Faster Web Sites. These time-saving techniques are used by the world’s most popular web sites to create a faster user experience, increase revenue, and reduce operating costs. Steve provides technical details about reducing the pain of JavaScript, as well as secrets for making your page load faster in emerging markets where network connectivity is a challenge.

    Steve works at Google on web performance and open source initiatives. He previously served as Chief Performance Yahoo!. Steve is the author of High Performance Web Sites and Even Faster Web Sites. He created YSlow, the performance analysis plug-in for Firefox. He serves as co-chair of Velocity, the web performance and operations conference from O’Reilly, and is co-founder of the Firebug Working Group. He recently taught CS193H: High Performance Web Sites at Stanford University.

    —Huffduffed by dobata 2 years ago