Today I gave a talk on memory leaks in web apps at the wonderful dotJS conference in Paris’ Folies Bergère theater. It was only 5 minutes, so not much time for links and such. Here’s more or less what I said including the links. Bonjour à toutes et à tous, who’s excited about… Memory Leaks!? […]
Do you hate it when sites open new tabs, for example from search results? Yeah, me too. So I thought a good idea would be to have a right-click “Open in this tab” similar to “Open in a new tab” option. Voilà, a new Chrome extension. You can install it from the store. How it […]
Why minimal? I like “minimum-viable”s of all sorts. As a performance enthusiast I’m fascinated by anything minimal. So here goes a minimum viable SVG favicon. Why favicon? Welp, browsers will look for one and if you don’t have it, enjoy the 404s! Why SVG? It could be tiny, almost as tiny as a CDN URL, […]
I recently saw someone sharing a blog post on social media using a video that just scrolls through the blog post. I wondered if a video like this can be created easily and automatically. Using a simple bookmarklet. Turns out yes! I ended up with two bookmarklets because they do different and independent things: one […]
tl;dr: You can stop worrying and URL-encode only the # character. What? So you want to have an SVG image in a CSS stylesheet. Yup, using data URIs (hey lookie, a 2009 post). There are a number of reasons not to embed images in CSS to begin with (caching, reuse), but hey, sometimes you’re not […]
TL;DR: If your font file is significantly larger than 20K you may ask yourself “How did I get here?”. For images I think we (web developers) have a sense of how many bytes we can expect an image we see on a page to be. A JPEG photo? 100-ish K is ok for a decent […]
Ever wanted to look at your page and turn Web Fonts on and off? Experience the layout shift repeatedly, like some sort of UX torture? Look no further, here comes the handy bookmarklet. Install Drag this link to a bookmark toolbar near you: toggle fonts Use Go to a page with web fonts and click […]
You know the pattern: spit out some markup, probably server-side, but hide it for later. On-demand features (not to overwhelm the UI), dialogs waiting to pop, and so on. <div class=”modal hidden”>content here…<div> And what happens when the “content here…” includes resources, such as images? Is the browser going to download them? Let’s check. What […]
Remember spacer.gif? Yeah, “good” old days… We may now have all the CSS features to make everything better but sometimes the ghost of spacer gif rears its transparent head. And that’s an HTTP request. A request that’s better devoted to something useful. Like an LCP image or something, I dunno. So anyway, sometimes a simple […]
Hello, dear reader and web performance enthusiast! It’s time to sit down and write an article for the performance calendar. Here are some more details. Or if you’re not feeling like writing, look around you and recruit the person you think should share their knowledge with the world. What can you write about? Just share […]
Couple days ago I found out about a tool called pdfcpu, a PDF processor. Among its features I saw “optimize” so I had to take it ot for a spin and see how much of an optimization we’re talking about. Here’s a quick study of optimizing a random-ish sample of PDF files. Source data I […]
Let’s see how to setup and run cjxl (and its sibling djxl) on a simple shared hosting provider so you can encode and decode JPEG-XL (aka JXL) images. How There are better ways to install libjxl and its command-line tools but they require you to have sufficient privileges on your computer or server. With inexpensive […]
So I woke up yesterday being scolded by Google. An email from Google Search Console Team with subject “Core Web Vitals INP issues detected on your site”. Huh?! It was about this WordPress-powered site that you’re reading now (phpied.com). The Interaction to Next Paint metric (INP for short) was in the “Needs improvement” category as […]
Inspired by Harry Roberts’ research and work on ct.css and Vitaly Friedman’s Nordic.js 2022 presentation, Rick Viscomi hacked up a tool (a JS snippet) called capo.js that can do what Harry says. Next logical step is to test the results of the tool in a no-code experimental setting and see if the results make sense […]
Lighthouse (LH), the performance auditing tool from Google now has a diff tool so you can compare what happens before/after a change or me vs competitor types. And WebPageTest.org (WPT), the industry-darling web perf analyzer, also runs Lighthouse and in addition to presenting the results (in two different ways, actually) you can export the results […]
Adam Fendrych reported that Scott Jehl said in his Web Expo talk that a website should load before you can say “Cumulative Layout Shift”. What does that mean in practice? We’re web performance specialists here, we work with measurements and numbers, so we need a more exact number. Numbers reduce ambiguity. To find out that […]
Chrome is making a change on how Largest Contentful Paint (LCP) core web vital (CWV) is being calculated in order to avoid abuse. The abuse is that people cheat by putting a fake “hero” image (imagine a stretched out 1×1 transparent gif) and have this counted as a sooner LCP event. Chrome is fighting this […]
Details from a talk to NYWebPerf meetup will go here after the talk. For now there’s: github.com/stoyan/progressive with the code and slides
“When I was younger, so much younger than today” and upset and full of vinegar about the state of the world, I’d say things like “CSS is the worst” (not really). Now, half a year later, older and wiser and more accepting, I’d agree to mellow down to “CSS is render-blocking”. Un-render-blocking CSS What this […]
Lately I’ve been rediscovering the joy of PHP. Also been helping an MVP get off the ground which uses a lot of nocode/lowcode bits and pieces and miraculously puts them together. Anyway, I had to write to an Airtable table with PHP and some quick googling didn’t find an example to copy-paste so I’m writing […]
Helloooo, dear reader and web performance enthusiast! It’s time to sit down and write an article for the performance calendar. Here are some more details. Or if you’re not feeling like writing, look around you and recruit the person you think should share their knowledge with the world. What do you want to write about? […]
Thomas Steiner has a brilliant idea for this year’s Perfplanet calendar edition: what if we revisit some of the best articles from the past. “Best” is subjective but how about “still popular”? So here’s a list of the 31 most visited articles in the past year in reverse chronological order of publication. (31 as the […]
tsia ffmpeg -loop 1 -i image.png -i audio.mp3 -c:a copy -c:v libx264 -shortest result.mp4
I wanted to create a video that is a 3×2 grid of 6 other videos. This one to be precise: I was hoping I can use ffmpeg, because the thought of using a proper video editing software gives me the chills. In fact at some point I thought things will require iMovie and went to […]
One of my esteemed professors from Santa Monica College, Dr. Driscoll asked for an opinion on how one can use a sheet of music and reshuffle some measures to generate a unique exercise for each student. This turned out more fun than anticipated and here’s a solution I came up with using the free notation […]