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https://git.sr.ht/~seirdy/seirdy.one
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Describe dark image variants and optimized loading
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@ -275,6 +275,26 @@ If you really want to go overboard with PNG optimization, you can try a tool lik
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=> https://github.com/fhanau/Efficient-Compression-Tool Efficient Compression Tool on GitHub
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=> https://github.com/fhanau/Efficient-Compression-Tool Efficient Compression Tool on GitHub
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### Dark image variants
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A "<picture>" element allows selection of sources based on any CSS media query. When images have light backgrounds, I like to include dark variants too.
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```
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<source
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srcset=/p/dark.png
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type=image/png
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media="screen and (prefers-color-scheme: dark)">
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<source
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srcset=/p/light.png
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type=image/png>
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```
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Requiring the "screen" media type prevents selection of dark variants when printing. Printer paper is almost always white, so dark images could waste ink. Ink waste is a sensitive issue among many students: school printers sometimes charge students who exceed a given ink quota. Ask me how I know!
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Light and dark variants of legacy formats (PNG, JPG, GIF), WebP, and AVIF can cause some of my "<picture>" imagesets to have up to six image variants. I could fully automate the process using my static site generator (Hugo) if I wanted to. Since I do want to inspect each image and compress to the minimum acceptable quality, I settled for partial automation using shell scripts and a Hugo shortcode:
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=> https://git.sr.ht/~seirdy/seirdy.one/tree/master/layouts/shortcodes/picture.html My shortcode for <picture> elements
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## Layout
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## Layout
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This is possibly the most subjective item I'm including, and the item with the most exceptions. Consider it more of a weak suggestion than hard advice. Use your own judgement.
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This is possibly the most subjective item I'm including, and the item with the most exceptions. Consider it more of a weak suggestion than hard advice. Use your own judgement.
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@ -376,6 +396,46 @@ I address the issue by not using any SVG images on my hidden service:
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=> http://wgq3bd2kqoybhstp77i3wrzbfnsyd27wt34psaja4grqiezqircorkyd.onion/ My Tor hidden service (HTTP+HTML)
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=> http://wgq3bd2kqoybhstp77i3wrzbfnsyd27wt34psaja4grqiezqircorkyd.onion/ My Tor hidden service (HTTP+HTML)
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## Optimal loading
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Lightweight content isn't the only factor for optimizing load times. There are ways to optimize loading without a CDN.
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### Blocking content
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HTML is a blocking resource: images and stylesheets will not load until the user agent loads and parses the HTML that calls them. To start loading above-the-fold images before the HTML parsing finishes, send a "link" HTTP header.
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My website includes a "link" header to load an SVG that serves as my IndieWeb photo and favicon:
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```
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link: </favicon.072dbf7bc4323646b9ee96243fbd71b2.svg>; rel=preload; as=image
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```
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Reducing load time is especially useful for users with unreliable connections. For much of the world, connectivity comes in short bursts during which loading time is precious. Chances of a connection failure or packet loss increase with time.
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### Inline content
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In addition to HTML, CSS is also a blocking resource. You could pre-load your CSS using a "link" header. Alternatively: if your CSS is under a kilobyte, consider inlining it in the <head> using a <style> element. Simply inlining stylesheets can pose a security threat, but the "style-src" CSP directive can mitigate this if you include a hash of your inline stylesheet.
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You can do the same with images by using a "data:" URI; my 32-pixel PNG site icon is under 200 bytes and inlines quite nicely. On this site's hidden service, it's often the only image on a page (recall that the hidden service replaces SVGs with PNGs). Inlining this image and the stylesheet allows my hidden service's homepage to load in a single request, which is a welcome improvement given the round-trip latency that plagues onion routing implementations.
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### Layout shifts
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Loading content with unknown dimensions, such as images, can create layout shifts; the WICG's Layout Instability API describes the phenomenon in detail.
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=> https://wicg.github.io/layout-instability/#sec-intro Layout Instability API
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Avoid layout shifts by including dimensions in HTML attributes. The simplest way to do so is by including "width" and "height" values, but the "style" attribute could work too. I recommend staying away from the "style" attribute, or at least selectively allowing its use with the "style-src-attr" CSP directive.
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### Other server-side tweaks
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In-depth server configuration is a bit out of scope, so I'll keep this section brief.
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Compression--especially static compression--dramatically reduces download sizes. My full-text RSS feed is about a quarter of a megabyte, but the Brotli-compressed version is around 70 kilobytes. Caddy supports this with a "precompressed" directive; Nginx requires a separate module:
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=> https://github.com/google/ngx_brotli The ngx_brotli module
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When serving many resources at once (e.g., if a page has many images), HTTP/2 could offer a speed boost through multiplexing. HTTP/3 is unlikely to help textual websites much, so run a benchmark to see if it's worthwhile.
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## Non-Browsers: Reading mode
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## Non-Browsers: Reading mode
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Fully standards-compliant browsers aren't the only programs people use. They also use "reading mode" tools and services.
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Fully standards-compliant browsers aren't the only programs people use. They also use "reading mode" tools and services.
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@ -240,6 +240,31 @@ If you want to include a profile photo (e.g., if your website is part of the Ind
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If you really want to go overboard with PNG optimization, you can try a tool like [Efficient Compression Tool](https://github.com/fhanau/Efficient-Compression-Tool).
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If you really want to go overboard with PNG optimization, you can try a tool like [Efficient Compression Tool](https://github.com/fhanau/Efficient-Compression-Tool).
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### Dark image variants
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A `<picture>` element allows selection of sources based on any CSS media query. When images have light backgrounds, I like to include dark variants too.
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<figure>
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<figcaption>
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A minimal example of what this could look like:
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</figcaption>
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```
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<source
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srcset=/p/dark.png
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type=image/png
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media="screen and (prefers-color-scheme: dark)">
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<source
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srcset=/p/light.png
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type=image/png>
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```
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</figure>
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Requiring the `screen` media type prevents selection of dark variants when printing. Printer paper is almost always white, so dark images could waste ink. Ink waste is a sensitive issue among many students: school printers sometimes charge students who exceed a given ink quota. Ask me how I know!
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Light and dark variants of legacy formats (PNG, JPG, GIF), WebP, and AVIF can cause some of my `<picture>` imagesets to have up to six image variants. I could fully automate the process using my static site generator (Hugo) if I wanted to. Since I do want to inspect each image and compress to the minimum acceptable quality, I settled for partial automation using shell scripts and [a Hugo shortcode](https://git.sr.ht/~seirdy/seirdy.one/tree/master/layouts/shortcodes/picture.html).
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Layout
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Layout
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------
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------
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@ -329,6 +354,48 @@ The Tor browser will download whichever format Firefox would, rather than whiche
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I address the issue by not using any SVG images on [my hidden service](http://wgq3bd2kqoybhstp77i3wrzbfnsyd27wt34psaja4grqiezqircorkyd.onion/).
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I address the issue by not using any SVG images on [my hidden service](http://wgq3bd2kqoybhstp77i3wrzbfnsyd27wt34psaja4grqiezqircorkyd.onion/).
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Optimal loading
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---------------
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Lightweight content isn't the only factor for optimizing load times. There are ways to optimize loading without a <abbr title="Content Delivery Network">CDN</abbr>.
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### Blocking resources
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HTML is a blocking resource: images and stylesheets will not load until the user agent loads and parses the HTML that calls them. To start loading above-the-fold images before the HTML parsing finishes, send a `link` HTTP header.
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<figure>
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<figcaption>
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My website includes a `link` header to load an SVG that serves as my IndieWeb photo and favicon:
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</figcaption>
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```
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link: </favicon.072dbf7bc4323646b9ee96243fbd71b2.svg>; rel=preload; as=image
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```
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</figure>
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Reducing load time is especially useful for users with unreliable connections. For much of the world, connectivity comes in short bursts during which loading time is precious. Chances of a connection failure or packet loss increase with time.
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### Inline content
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In addition to HTML, CSS is also a blocking resource. You could pre-load your CSS using a `link` header. Alternatively: if your CSS is under a kilobyte, consider inlining it in the `<head>` using a `<style>` element. Simply inlining stylesheets can pose a security threat, but the `style-src` <abbr title="Content Security Policy">CSP</abbr> directive can mitigate this if you include a hash of your inline stylesheet.
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You can do the same with images by using a `data:` URI; my 32-pixel PNG site icon is under 200 bytes and inlines quite nicely. On this site's hidden service, it's often the only image on a page (recall that the hidden service replaces SVGs with PNGs). Inlining this image and the stylesheet allows my hidden service's homepage to load in a single request, which is a welcome improvement given the round-trip latency that plagues onion routing implementations.
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### Layout shifts
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Loading content with unknown dimensions, such as images, can create layout shifts; the <abbr title="Web Incubator Community Group">WICG</abbr>'s <cite>[Layout Instability API](https://wicg.github.io/layout-instability/#sec-intro)</cite> describes the phenomenon in detail. Avoid layout shifts by including dimensions in HTML attributes. The simplest way to do so is by including `width` and `height` values, but the `style` attribute could work too. I recommend staying away from the `style` attribute, or at least selectively allowing its use with the `style-src-attr` CSP directive.
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### Other server-side tweaks
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In-depth server configuration is a bit out of scope, so I'll keep this section brief.
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Compression--especially static compression--dramatically reduces download sizes. My full-text RSS feed is about a quarter of a megabyte, but the Brotli-compressed version is around 70 kilobytes. Caddy supports this with a `precompressed` directive; Nginx requires a [separate module](https://github.com/google/ngx_brotli).
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When serving many resources at once (e.g., if a page has many images), HTTP/2 could offer a speed boost through multiplexing. HTTP/3 is unlikely to help textual websites much, so run a benchmark to see if it's worthwhile.
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Non-Browsers: Reading mode
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Non-Browsers: Reading mode
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--------------------------
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--------------------------
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