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DiversityTech@gmail.com
 
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Default Slow page load for dial up users - 11-23-2005 , 10:31 AM






I've got a site with some features that might be slow to load for dial
up users (only about 7-10% of visitors), but I want to make it
accessible to as wide an audience as possible.

Several visitors - now clients - with faster connections have
complemented the aesthetics, noting that it set us apart from the
competition, so I'm hesitant to dumb it down.

The easiest option I can think of is to redirect dial up users to a
simpler page with same/similar information on our services.

Any suggestions on how this can be done without creating duplicate
pages that will be frowned upon by G? A redirect in the header with a
no follow tag?

Thanks,
KW


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Roy Schestowitz
 
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Default Re: Slow page load for dial up users - 11-23-2005 , 12:42 PM






__/ [DiversityTech (AT) gmail (DOT) com] on Wednesday 23 November 2005 15:31 \__

Quote:
I've got a site with some features that might be slow to load for dial
up users (only about 7-10% of visitors), but I want to make it
accessible to as wide an audience as possible.

You might find the following Web-based tool handy:

http://www.websiteoptimization.com/services/analyze/


Quote:
Several visitors - now clients - with faster connections have
complemented the aesthetics, noting that it set us apart from the
competition, so I'm hesitant to dumb it down.

Attractive-looking pages are the key to enticing visitors who will return.
Having said that, heavy pages deter users with slow connection and may
lead people to hate you (your site rather). The secret is to compress as
much as possible (bearing browser support in mind) and using CSS to do
tricks that otherwise require unnecessary graphics (i.e. bandwidth). See
http://meyerweb.com , for example.


Quote:
The easiest option I can think of is to redirect dial up users to a
simpler page with same/similar information on our services.

You could give a choice as an opening page. Do not re-direct without a
warning. "Your connection is not good enough for our /real/ page" is a
poor excuse, which can make matters even worse. Flash and "No Flash ver-
sion" is a different situation where taste, compatibility and patience
play an important role.


Quote:
Any suggestions on how this can be done without creating duplicate
pages that will be frowned upon by G? A redirect in the header with a
no follow tag?

Do not misuse the rel="nofollow" option. It might not lead to penalties
yet, but it gets used where it mustn't. In my humble opinion, action might
be taken against it in the future.

How about building the site with rich CSS (if it is not already so) and
then using different layouts (styles), which the user can select? The
browser cookie often 'remembers' which layout its user felt most comfort-
able with. There are also plenty of gains due to centralisation of content
and standards-based design. Think about PDA's too.

Hope it helps,

Roy

--
Roy S. Schestowitz | Useless fact: sheep outnumber people in NZ
http://Schestowitz.com | SuSE Linux | PGP-Key: 0x74572E8E
5:30pm up 20 days 13:24, 4 users, load average: 0.11, 0.15, 0.28
http://iuron.com - next generation of search paradigms


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Borek
 
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Default Re: Slow page load for dial up users - 11-24-2005 , 05:18 AM



On Wed, 23 Nov 2005 16:31:08 +0100, <DiversityTech (AT) gmail (DOT) com> wrote:

Quote:
The easiest option I can think of is to redirect dial up users to a
simpler page with same/similar information on our services.

Any suggestions on how this can be done without creating duplicate
pages that will be frowned upon by G? A redirect in the header with a
no follow tag?
I think it can be done using css - add a button somewhere "Dial-up
connection" and once clicked the person will navigate exactly the
same content - the only difference being different css, defined in header:

<link rel="stylesheet" href="content.css" type="text/css" />

This way there will be no duplicate content penalty, as there is no
duplicate content, just the page is rendered differently.

That's the idea behind the css - formatting is separated from the content.

Best,
Borek
--
http://www.chembuddy.com
http://www.chembuddy.com/?left=BATE&...ion_equilibria
http://www.chembuddy.com/?left=CASC&...n_calcul ator


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