X

Web sites are getting faster--but not enough

The top 2,000 retail Web sites load faster this year but still take 10 seconds on average, a study says. Also: IE9 beats Chrome and Firefox in the speed race.

Stephen Shankland Former Principal Writer
Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 and wrote about processors, digital photography, AI, quantum computing, computer science, materials science, supercomputers, drones, browsers, 3D printing, USB, and new computing technology in general. He has a soft spot in his heart for standards groups and I/O interfaces. His first big scoop was about radioactive cat poop.
Expertise Processors, semiconductors, web browsers, quantum computing, supercomputers, AI, 3D printing, drones, computer science, physics, programming, materials science, USB, UWB, Android, digital photography, science. Credentials
  • Shankland covered the tech industry for more than 25 years and was a science writer for five years before that. He has deep expertise in microprocessors, digital photography, computer hardware and software, internet standards, web technology, and more.
Stephen Shankland
3 min read
Page-load speeds for the top 2,000 retail sites in 2011 loaded on average in 10 seconds, a Strangeloop study found. The median speed was 8.4 seconds.
Page-load speeds for the top 2,000 retail sites in 2011 loaded on average in 10 seconds, a Strangeloop study found. The median speed was 8.4 seconds. Strangeloop

Many Web developers have gotten the message: a faster site means people buy more, read more, interact more, and return more.

But apparently the message hasn't sunk in far enough, because the top 2,000 retail Web sites still take 10 seconds to load on average, according to a study by Strangeloop Networks released yesterday. The list of the top retail sites comes from Amazon's Alexa list of top sites.

Strangeloop is in the business of helping customers speed up their Web sites, so it has an agenda to push, but that shouldn't deter developers from taking a look at the study's findings.

One big issue in particular jumped out at me after a chat with Strangeloop President Joshua Bixby: Web developers should test their pages the way their readers see it, not the way they see it on their own machines.

Strangeloop's study uses a speed-testing tool called WebPagetest developed by Patrick Meenan, who started it at AOL but who now works for Google. That test adds delays called latency to round-trip communications to better simulate how ordinary people several steps removed from a Web site see it, Bixby said.

"Most tests are run out of a huge data center with absolutely no latency and with bandwidth that is outrageous," Bixby said. "These test machines in data centers are next to the content delivery machines. They're just sending bits across a cage." That typically hides problems that real-world users have.

Latency matters a lot, in particular because it's a problem that compounds as a Web browser has to make multiple network connections to Web servers to request new elements. There are lot of tricks to reduce the number of requests a browser must make, but the Strangeloop study shows the complexity of Web pages is increasing at the same time as economization measures and browser speed are improving.

"Pages continue to get bigger and continue to have more requests," Bixby said. "In some ways we're losing the battle--or maybe it's a stalemate. We're not getting much better."

Although the first time viewing a page got faster, repeat views slowed down.
Although the first time viewing a page got faster, repeat views slowed down. Strangeloop

Well, maybe not losing that badly. Overall, the study found the top 2,000 retail Web sites load about 10 percent faster than a year earlier. And though the top 100 of those are slower on average--10.36 seconds compared to 10.00 for the overall group--they're benefiting from some optimization, Strangeloop said. That's because the top 100 sites on average make 98 requests for resources such as images or JavaScript libraries, compared to 77 for the overall group.

Another step backward came in how long a repeat view of a Web page took. Returning to a Web site should go faster, since browsers cache resources on computers for faster retrieval later, but repeat views actually slowed. In last year's study, a repeat view took on average 5.10 seconds, but this year, it was 6.20 seconds.

One more finding concerned browsers. Here, Microsoft's IE9 edged out Google's Chrome, Firefox's Mozilla, and IE7 to win the speed crown. On average, IE9 took 7.12 seconds to load the pages compared to 7.15 seconds for Firefox 7, 7.5 seconds for Chrome, and 10 seconds for IE7.

"Microsoft has started to catch up," Bixby said. "More than catch up--IE9 is equal and in some tests surpass some of these other browsers."