Test Website Load Time with Pingdom Full Page Test

This article was written on November 23, 2011 by CyberNet.

Page load speed test

There are some great tools out there for testing a website’s performance including Web Page Test, Stella, and WatchMouse. Those are the three that I regularly find myself using, but the website monitoring service Pingdom recently updated their Full Page Test tool blowing many others out of the water.

The new interface they have is beautifully designed, which helps in understanding the data they are presenting to you. When you begin navigating through the various sections you’ll find a full waterfall view that lets you know how long each individual request on the site took, and you can even see a page analysis to help serve as an overview of all those requests.

Then you can flip over to the performance grade to get an idea of which areas on your site could use the most improvement. Expanding any of the sections will list out the requests that go against that particular rule, and towards the bottom they provide a link referencing what you can do to resolve the issues.

There are also some settings you can choose from before you initiate a test. One setting lets you decide whether the results of the test should be saved and made public, and the other is the location of the server running the test (Netherlands, New York, or Texas).

Pingdom Full Page Test Homepage

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FCC launches speed test app for Android, looks to collect mobile broadband performance data

As expected, the FCC has launched a Speed Test app that measures mobile broadband performance for Android devices. Available as a free download from Google Play, the app runs periodically in the background and performs tests when you aren’t using your handset. There is a manual test option, for those of you steeped in the ways of Speedtest.net.

According to the FCC, the app is a “first step towards evaluating mobile broadband network performance, arming consumers with information to make fact-based, informed decisions about their wireless providers.” In practice, data gathered from FCC Speed Test will help build out visualizations and maps that compare speeds and technologies across the country. Android users can hit up the Google Play link below to try it out. iPhone users, meanwhile, will have to wait till early next year; the FCC says it will submit an iOS version by late 2014.

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Via: Phone Scoop

Source: Google Play, FCC

Watch Every Model of iPhone Get Speed Tested at the Same Time

Ever wonder if your iPhone 4 really was weirdly slow? Or if iOS 7, despite its bells and whistles, just has a longer boot time than your old 3G? Well wonder no longer. You’re about to find out for sure.

Read more…


    



Google Fiber Has Real World Speeds of 700 Mbps

Google Fiber is being installed all over Kansas City right now and people are so happy about the blazing fast speed that they’ve posted pictures of their speed tests. It’s ridiculous. People with Google Fiber can expect 700 Mbps down on ethernet and about 200 Mbps down on Wi-Fi. That’s ISP heaven on Earth. More »

New National School Speed Test hopes to help all K-12 students get effective digital learning

EducationSuperHighway launches National School Speed Test to help all K12 students get effective digital learning

With 99 percent of the nation’s K-12 schools hooked-up to the internet, you’d think online learning was an educational staple. Sadly, it’s also estimated that some 80 percent of those connections can’t provide the 100Mbps per 1,000 students bandwidth the State Education Technology Directors Association recommends. That’s why NPO EducationSuperHigway has announced the National School Speed Test initiative, with the goal to take actual stock of the state of internet connections in our schools. The NSST hopes to measure the internet capabilities of every K-12 school, and identify those that are lagging behind. Educational staff and students can also help out by checking their own school’s speeds on a dedicated website (linked below). The results of the NSST will be open to the institutions themselves, districts and state departments of education, enabling them to better plan upgrade strategies for the future.

Continue reading New National School Speed Test hopes to help all K-12 students get effective digital learning

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New National School Speed Test hopes to help all K-12 students get effective digital learning originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Sep 2012 09:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceSchool speed test, EducationSuperHighway  | Email this | Comments

We test speeds on EE, the UK’s first LTE network! (video)

We test speeds on EE, the UK's first LTE network!

Formerly known as Everything Everywhere, also known as the union of Orange and T-Mobile’s UK networks, it’s now going under the name EE and (finally) bringing LTE to the British Isles in the coming weeks. We decided to see what that means by running Speed Test on the device — and it’s looking good. Upload speeds averaged around 20Mbps, while downloads peaked around 38Mbps — consistently above 25Mbps. If you’re wondering what this means for how you’ll normally use your phone, Angry Birds’ 20MB-plus app download rocketed down from the new network and this very site appeared in an instant. See for yourself after the break.

Continue reading We test speeds on EE, the UK’s first LTE network! (video)

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We test speeds on EE, the UK’s first LTE network! (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 Sep 2012 06:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ASUS Transformer Pad TF300 with LTE stretches its legs on O2 in Germany (video)

Transformer Pad TF300 LTE version stretches its legs on O2 in Germany

It wasn’t all that long ago, that the FCC tempted us with the idea of an LTE capable Transformer Pad TF300. Now, a video has popped up online from Germany’s O2 network showing of the speedy tablet in all its 42 Mbps down / 32 Mbps up glory. After the obligatory speed test, you can see YouTube videos loading up a charm, along with plenty of other HD video being scrubbed along like it wasn’t even a thing. A quick tour of the white-backed version reveals little else of note, but if the lack of LTE was keeping the dollars in your wallet, this might just be enough to tease them back out.

[Thanks, Alexis]

Continue reading ASUS Transformer Pad TF300 with LTE stretches its legs on O2 in Germany (video)

ASUS Transformer Pad TF300 with LTE stretches its legs on O2 in Germany (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Jul 2012 08:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceTelefonica Germany, o2deofficial (YouTube)  | Email this | Comments