Tag Archives: chrome

Reasons to "love" Windows 10, part 761

Hoo boy… [QUOTE]Microsoft is getting ready to warn Windows 10 users not to install Chrome or Firefox. The software giant is in the final s… | Read the rest of http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1729999&goto=newpost Continue reading

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Chrome 68, Chrome will mark all HTTP sites as “not secure”

Starting this month with the realease of Chrome 68 the browser will now mark all website without a valid SSL certificate as not secure. Is y… | Read the rest of http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1718484&goto=newpost Continue reading

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Page Speed Matters: 4 Reasons Why Bloggers Need To Care About Load Time

The post Page Speed Matters: 4 Reasons Why Bloggers Need To Care About Load Time appeared first on HostGator Blog . Why Page Speed Matters for Your Blog Everyone’s talking about how important page speed is for online businesses now. But does it really matter for your blog? It might, depending on your goals and whether you earn money from your blog. Here’s how to know if page load times are a big deal for your blog ( hint: the answer is yes ), and how to test and improve your blog’s page speed. 4 Ways Faster Page Load Times Help Your Blog   1. Faster pages rank better in the search results. Page load time is a factor in Google’s desktop search results rankings. In July, Google’s planned Speed Update will add mobile page load times to the factors for mobile search result rankings. Google’s Webmaster Central blog says all pages will be held to the same standard for search rankings, but that developers expect the update to “only affect pages that deliver the slowest experience.” How big a deal is it? If your mobile pages load fast or even at middling speeds, you’re probably OK. If your site loads really slowly on mobile, now’s the time to start speeding it up.   2. Fast page loads keep visitors from giving up on your blog. Even if Google doesn’t downrank your site for loading slowly on mobile, visitors may decide it’s not worth waiting around for your content. More than half of mobile users will bail on a site that takes more than three seconds to load—but many mobile pages take 15 or more seconds to load . How big a deal is it? It depends on your bounce rate and your page speed. Check your analytics to compare your mobile and desktop bounce rates. If your bounce rate is higher and your page load times are lower on mobile than on desktop, you’ve got a problem that needs fixing.   3. Faster page loads may help you beat the competition. If you sell on your blog and have competitors, remember that they’re under the same pressure to get with the page speed program. Deliver faster load times than they do and you may appear higher in search results. How big a deal is it? If you make money from your blog and sell in a competitive niche, faster load times are a must.   4. Faster page load times may raise your blog’s conversion rates. Even if you don’t sell on your blog, there’s probably something you’d like your visitors to do besides read and leave— join your email list , follow you on social media, join the discussion in the comments. All of these steps are conversions, just as getting a visitor to sign up for a class or buy the jewelry you blog about are conversions. Faster page speeds won’t translate directly into more conversions, but they can contribute. How big a deal is it? If prospects find your competition first in search results and never see your blog, or visit but bounce after 8 seconds of waiting, there’s no chance they’ll convert. Get those calls to action in front of your visitors fast and you stand a better chance of earning conversions.   5 Free Google Tools To Improve Your Page Load Times Here are five Google tools you can use to see how fast your site loads and how you can make it faster.   1. Google’s Mobile-Friendly Test Google’s Mobile-Friendly Test is easy. Plug the page URL you want to test into the search field and run your test. In a minute or so, you’ll get the verdict: mobile-friendly or not. If there were any issues loading your page during the test, you’ll get a list of those along with tips on fixing them.   2. Google PageSpeed Insights PageSpeed Insights compares your site’s load times on desktop and mobile. You may find that your site scores fine on the Mobile-Friendly Test but does poorly on PageSpeed’s mobile evaluation. Again, you’ll get a list of suggestions for improvement (such as optimizing your images for fast loading times ) plus a downloadable file of site elements that Google optimized for you.   3. Lighthouse Lighthouse is a good option if the fixes recommended in your Mobile-Friendly and PageSpeed test results don’t solve your slow load times. It’s a developer tool, so the results are more technical than those in the tests above. They’re also broader – Lighthouse checks SEO, progressive web app performance, accessibility, best practices, and overall performance. You’ll get a downloadable report with recommendations you can work on or share with a professional developer.   4. Speed Scorecard Speed Scorecard is one of Google’s newest tools.  It lets you compare load times for up to ten sites, including your own. However, its comparison database only includes sites popular enough to appear in the Chrome User Experience Report. Most smaller blogs won’t show up, but that doesn’t mean you can’t check out larger competitors or colleagues in your niche.   5. Revenue Impact Calculator Google’s new Revenue Impact Calculator (below the Speed Scorecard) is where you can put a dollar amount on your page speed, if you sell things on your blog. Even if your site doesn’t show up in the Speed Scorecard database, you can still measure the revenue impact of speeding up your page loads if you enter a few pieces of data from your dashboard and accounts: Current page load speed Average monthly site visitors Average order value Conversion rate For example, a blog that loads in 8 seconds, has 500 visitors a month, an average order value of $50 and a conversion rate of two percent could earn $471 more per year by reducing the page load time to 4 seconds. Another blog that loads in 5 seconds, gets 20,000 monthly visitors, has an average order value of $100 and a conversion rate of 1% could earn $14,721 more per year by dropping the page load time to 2.8 seconds.   Page Speed Does Matter for Blogs Ultimately, page speed is a big deal if you want visitors, readers, and revenue for your blog, and it will probably become an even bigger deal as more traffic moves from desktop to mobile. Keep up with the latest innovations, make sure your web host delivers the speed you need, and make sure you’re following all seven of these best practices for speeding up your website . Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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What’s a Progressive Web App, and Does Your Site Need One?

The post What’s a Progressive Web App, and Does Your Site Need One? appeared first on HostGator Blog . Why So Many Sites Are Building Progressive Web Apps Remember a couple of years ago when everyone was telling site owners to implement responsive design for smartphone users? Responsive design still matters, but the mobile-usability goalposts are moving toward progressive web apps (PWAs) . What are PWAs? PWAs occupy the space between desktopssites with responsive mobile display and full-blown mobile apps that users have to download and install. PWAs load fast, get right to the point, use minimal data, work offline, send push notifications and put icons on users’ homescreens, all without the development investment in an app. Is a PWA right for your site? If so, how can you build one? Let’s take a look. Google has the definitive list of PWA criteria , but in very simple terms, PWAs are web sites that act like apps. PWAs are at least twice as fast as responsive websites, which means that even if you have a responsive template to make your site as mobile-friendly as possible , a progressive web app may still offer some specific advantages, depending on what your site does and what your goals are.   What are the advantages of PWAs? Progressive web apps can benefit retailers, information providers, NGOs, and their users.   1. PWAs can boost sales Many retailers who add PWAs report mobile sales growth, because PWAs help overcome some of the issues that cause mobile shoppers to bail out before buying, such as difficult navigation, slow load times, and fussy data-entry at checkout. After launching its progressive web app, cosmetics company Lancome saw a 17% increase in mobile revenue in the US market. AliExpress, the China-based merchant marketplace, saw conversion rates rise by 104% after its PWA went live . Clearly, customers are happy to make purchases on their phones as long as the process is easy, and PWAs can make it so. 2. PWAs load fast and use less data Most smartphone users will wait 3 seconds tops for your site to load. After that, they’re gone. A PWA speeds up load times, which is good for all users, whether they’re impatient city dwellers who are multitasking at top speed or people in rural, backcountry, or developing areas who want to make the most of their limited connectivity. A good non-retail example of a PWA is the UN’s ReliefWeb. The huge humanitarian-crisis information portal has a full site (below, left) with maps, slideshows, a Twitter feed, and more. The site loads fast for people using the type of internet connection common in major Western cities. But for aid workers in remote locations and disaster zones, it’s not as useful as ReliefWeb’s “lite” site (below, right), which debuted in December 2017 . The PWA distills the content to easy-to-scroll headlines and a small navigation menu. Continue reading

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Google Reveals Plan to Offer Wireless Service

The greatly anticipated Google wireless service will be revealed “in the coming months,” the company confirmed this week. Speaking at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona, Google SVP of Android, Chrome and Apps Sundar Pichai responded to a question by setting a timeline for the announcement. Continue reading

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