Posts Tagged ‘Page Load Time’

90% of my Traffic is Lightspeed fast, but I need more!

Monday, August 9th, 2010

Lightning fast NEW scalable Magento Hosting. Easy, powerful, on-demand. (Guides)

What’s going on?

First, understand from a high-level that Lightspeed caches entire pages. It’s like taking a picture of a group at a family reunion. Instead of having to get the family back together every time you want to show that particular page (or see that group of people), you just bring up the photo you took. With Lightspeed, instead of loading PHP, running through Magento, and making DB calls to generate a page, Apache simply returns the static HTML generated for that page when it was first cached (Or that picture was taken). This means much faster page loads and much less work for Apache/PHP (or whatever web server setup you use).

For typical Magento installations, a small portion of your traffic requires you to change something (like adding cousin Larry to the picture), which can require getting the whole gang back together (PHP/Magento/MySQL). In the case of Magento, this happens for a small number of your users when a user logs in, adds something to their cart, starts checking out, or you’re in the admin panel, which renders new HTML for  every single page load. With Lightspeed, a fully re-rendered page is required only occasionally for your customers. If your admin is “too slow”, you probably have problems that a hardware upgrade could address.

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Lightspeed Magento Module improves user experience and aids SEO.

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Lightning fast NEW scalable Magento Hosting. Easy, powerful, on-demand. (Guides)

In April Google announced that they are officially considering page load times as part of their algorithm. Google decided that this is important because users spend less time on slow sites, and quick page load times make happier users.  From an SEO standpoint load times don’t carry the weight of relevant content or incoming links, but in competitive keywords, load times can give you an edge on the competition.  According to Google any page load slower than 1.5 seconds is slow.

Google Page Load Time Graph

Google Page Load Time Graph

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