Page Weight Research
15 January 08
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A while back I did some page weight research on homepages. I thought someone else might find this data interesting.
Top U.S. sites 2007:
- amazon – 518k, 112 http
- aol – 235k, 56 http
- cnn – 656k, 144 http
- ebay – 143k , 53 http
- google – 10k, 2 http
- msn – 205k, 56 http
- myspace – 131k, 40 http
- wikipedia – 131k, 17 http
- yahoo – 219k, 39 http
- youtube – 248k, 51 http
Top U.S. retailer sites (based on 2006 results):
- amazon – 518k, 112 http
- staples – 293k, 45 http
- office depot – 155k, 53 http
- dell – 277k, 44 http
- hewlett packard – 289k, 57 http
- officeMax – 405k, 72 http
- Sears – 147k, 56 http
- CDW – 266k, 63 http
- SonyStyle – 591k, 48 http
- Newegg – 359k, 102 http
Outdoor Companies:
- patagonia – 506k, 75 http
- marmot – 137k, 23 http
- mountain hardwear – 180k, 20 http
- arcteryx – 229k 97 http
- columbia – 246k, 28 http
- llbean – 267k, 41 http
Outdoor online retailers:
- backcoutnry – 467k, 69 http
- mgear – 419k, 68 http
- rei – 122k, 35 http
- moosejaw – 422k, 48 http
- summithut – 202k, 12 http
- paragonsports – 207k, 38 http
- travelcountry – 186k, 54 http
- altrec – 391k, 79 http
- usoutdoorstore – 252k, 66 http
- rockcreek – 290k, 59 http
If the mouse pointer changes to a hand when you roll-over an image associated with a story the image upon clicking either links to enlarged version of the image or a website associated with the image.
Out of curiosity, what is considered to be a good number of http calls?
13.