seen from Yemen
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from China

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from Australia
seen from Singapore
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom
Não permita que outros tenham acesso ao seu computador pessoal!!!
Ongeveer 1 op 8 sites is responsive.
Seriously? Slechts zoveel?
Guy Podjarny heeft op een semi-automatische manier 10k sites getest, of ze al dan niet responisve zijn. Slechts 1 op 8 sites zou ook op een mobiel toestel iet of wat toonbaar zijn.
Eerlijk? Ik had meer verwacht. Zeker omdat de geteste sites uit http archive komen, en we daar spreken over "de top Alexa" ranking.
(image source: http://www.guypo.com/mobile/roughly-1-in-8-websites-is-responsive/)
I had intended to write about the results of Radware’s new EEG research into mobile usability, but I just realized that the HTTP Archive recently celebrated its third anniversary (happy birthday, HTTP Archive! Your card is in the mail!), making this a good time for our semi-annual look at page size and composition.
As you may or may not know, we’ve been reporting on the HTTP Archive data for the top 1,000 sites since the Archive’s inception in 2010. Over the years, we’ve learned one thing, definitively…
Pages keep getting bigger. And bigger. AND BIGGER.
1. The average top 1,000 web page is 1575 KB.
2. More than half of this size is due to images.
3. Flash is on the decrease. Custom fonts are on the increase.
The HTTP Archive code is open source and the data is downloadable. Approximately 17,000 top websites are examined every two weeks. I started gathering the data in October 2010. The list of URLs is derived from various sources including Alexa, Fortune 500, and Quantcast. The system is built on the shoulders of WebPagetest which downloads each URL and gathers a HAR file, screenshots, video of the site loading, and other information. From this information the HTTP Archive extracts data, stores it in a database, aggregates the data, and provides various statistical analyses.