Skip to main content

'Lazy loading' feature to speed up browing now available in Chrome Canary

...

Web pages are becoming more and more complex, but browser vendors have been hard at work trying to offset that with performance and caching improvements. For example, Service Workers allow sites to cache certain data locally to speed up load times (or work offline entirely). 'Lazy loading' is another performance enhancement that has been in development, and now it has arrived in the Canary channel of Chrome.

The concept behind lazy loading is simple - images and frames that aren't visible to the user aren't loaded until they become visible. For example, if an article has an image halfway down the page, the image won't be loaded until the user scrolls down to it. Chrome developers claim that the feature improves initial loading times by 18-35%, depending on the page and internet connection.

The feature can be turned on by switching the Chrome flags #enable-lazy-image-loading and #enable-lazy-frame-loading to 'Enabled.' Lazy loading is applied to all images and frames by default, but developers will be able to override the feature with a new HTML attribute.


#Google #Android #Smartphones #OS #News @ndrdnws #ndrdnws #AndroidNews

Popular Posts:

Apple is postponing new iOS features in favor of reliability and performance

Do more from your inbox with Gmail Add-ons

Google’s December 2018 security patch includes much-needed RAM management fix

DJI Mavic Air: could this be the definitive drone?

[Bonus Round] Meteorfall: Journeys, Out There Chronicles - Ep. 2, Four Last Things, Rocket Sling, Slime Pizza, Nindash: Skull Valley, and Ragnarok Rush