Happy New Year, folks! The next PerformanceObserver will be in a few weeks on Jan 28 featuring Morgan Murrah and Robin Marx (@programmingart.bsky.social) !
Join us live for access to chat and Q&A - all details and add to calendar at:
performanceobserver.dev
#webperf
Posts by Robin Marx
TTFB is a notoriously difficult performance metric, because it has so many different definitions and nuances.
New features like Early Hints and Speculation Rules only make that worse.
My new blog highlights these issues so you know what to keep in mind:
calendar.perfplanet.com/2025/ttfb-do...
Web Performance Calendar day 24 with @programmingart.bsky.social on TTFB. Yes, it's one of those X-mas Eves where we cuddle by the fire, drop everything and immerse into re-learning and re-evaluating what we thought we knew about a concept we use daily
calendar.perfplanet.com/2025/ttfb-do...
Halloween at #perfnow, pirates and vampires. A.k.a sword fight, the sequel.
Or... How RUMvision slayed Akamaiππ (jk)
@programmingart.bsky.social and I are on the same page for a lot of things but I'm still learning from the master on how much drip a Halloween costume should have #perfNow
Slides?? Wardrobe!!
Itβs not the whole story, but if you cannot see the truth of this, you need to pay more attention.
illustration of 3 cars driving down a 3 lane road, carrying web resources
Day 011 #100DaysOfPerf: I shared the hpbn book (Day 002) that wall about levelling up on HTTP. Well, let's look at CURRENT HTTP data from the @httparchive.org's Web Almanac. On deck β¨ HTTP β¨ by none other than @programmingart.bsky.social. Let's take a look: π§΅β¬οΈ
almanac.httparchive.org/en/2024/http
Featured posts this week:
β‘ Fast and furious: @catchpointsystems.bsky.social
β‘ How browsers REALLY load Web pages: @programmingart.bsky.social
β‘ Client-Side Rendering: @adevnadia.bsky.social
β‘ More Edge features get a perf boost: Mohamed Mansour
Special thanks to the authors.π
The "contributing" options on the web.dev bottom for example don't seem quite as inviting as say github.com/mdn/content, which imo helps reinforce the impression this is a google/chromium-first thing.
(just trying to provide some feedback on why I had my initial impressions on web.dev)
Arguably, you can't expect Chrome engineers to add non-chromium behaviours in there, but it's also unclear (at least to me on the outside looking in) if you would accept contributions from say Firefox/Safari/outsiders to extend that type of article with cross-browser content (it's already extensive)
Good to know this is the intent (as @paul.kinlan.me also echoed), but from my perspective, web.dev articles that talk about the type of topics I research, are usually still exceptionally chromium-focused, even for features in baseline (prime example being web.dev/articles/fet...).
Thanks Patrick. I would definitely be interested in contributing docs, I'm just not sure where they would fit best. Web.dev is traditionally google/chromium-focused and not sure if they'd want to change. MDN doesn't seem to do much of this more "fuzzy" content in my experience, but maybe I'm wrong?
Sadly yes... Dinner date with the wife I'm afraid
We kick off with @programmingart.bsky.social showing us how browsers REALLY load web pages to a full room! π€‘ fosdem.org/2025/schedul...
HTTP/1.1/2/3 are all present in unison on the web today, w/ a 21/70/9 split. Or is it? @programmingart.bsky.social will shed the light on the @httparchive.org Web Almanac data, and the reality of the protocol's adoption. Join us to hear him share findings this Thursday
π β¬οΈ
bsky.app/profile/henr...
Hmm, interesting - looks like Chrome added support for the ORIGIN frame for HTTP/3 (eliminating the need for a DNS lookup before coalescing connections).
blog.chromium.org/2024/12/maki...
Web performance calendar day 29 with @patmeenan.com on how to ship a production-quality dictionary compression implementation to reduce HTML/JS/CSS response sizes dramatically (as in 60-90% dramatically!)
calendar.perfplanet.com/2024/getting...
Web performance calendar day 21 with @timvereecke.bsky.social giving us the gift of UNO (Unattributed Navigation Overhead) - an insight into the blind spot gaps between TTFB components
calendar.perfplanet.com/2024/uno/
Let's hope we can re-invigorate that then :) Thanks for sharing!
For this year's #webperf calendar, I wrote "Top 8οΈβ£ things I want in the Devtools Network Panel".
I often struggle to debug modern networking features in browsers (like DNS HTTPS records, 0-RTT, and Happy Eyeballs π) and have some ideas on how to improve that!
calendar.perfplanet.com/2024/top-8-t...
Hmz that's indeed much lower than I would have expected... Maybe @tunetheweb.com can have a look once he's less busy? π
But as a percentage of all sites that use preload (the ~2.5 million):
235,535 / 2,506,138 = 0.09 = 9%
228,895 / 2,506,138 = 0.09 = 9%
so about 18% combined (round up to say 20% for the leftovers that uselessly preload more than 2 resources).
Hope that helps :)
Hm, I think it's more like 20% :) Looking at the raw results (docs.google.com/spreadsheets...).
2,506,138 used preload (~20 of all desktop homepages)
235,535 has 1 unused preload (~1.9% of all desktop homepages)
228,895 has 2 unused preloads (~1.85% of all)
Combined <4% of total (as reported)
My meme-game is on-point for my (first) perfcalendar 2024 submission @stoyan.org!
MASSIVE thank you to @tunetheweb.com, without whom there would have been no data to write about in the first place!
Barry is consistently one of the kindest and most hardworking people in #webperf (and beyond) and deserves our gratitude!
This year, I again had the honour of authoring the HTTP chapter of the Web Almanac: almanac.httparchive.org/en/2024/http
It's full of interesting stats on technologies like HTTP/3, DNS HTTPS records, preloads, 103 Early Hints and the FetchPriority API.
It also has Pirates π΄ββ οΈ and Marry Poppins π!
The HTTP chapter was written by @programmingart.bsky.social and being our first name, is a subject close to our heart π
almanac.httparchive.org/en/2024/http
Read it for lots of fascinating deep dive into to how web resources are delivered and the latest on how developers can influence that!