Thursday, March 10, 2016

MIT’s new software makes any web page to load … – Gizmodo in Spanish

 A new MIT software makes any p & # XE1; web page load 34% m & # XE1; s r & # XE1; ask

Make web pages load faster is like a kind of utopia. Actually we have managed to load faster, what happens is that increasingly have more content and weight. Now, thanks to MIT, that utopia is closer to 34% under any browser.

The software that created the Massachusetts Institute of Technology called Polaris, and what it does, in short words, is to simplify the task browser when collect the necessary items to load a page.

When entering a URL, browsers are picking up and carrying the various objects that make up the page (file HTML, Javascript, images …) but some of those objects are linked to others in a kind of chain that forces the browser to go back to collect the items that another object has asked to load properly.

what makes Polaris is to create a map with all dependencies and interdependencies of a web page so that the browser knows in advance what you will need to load. Researchers at the Laboratory of Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence (CSAIL for its acronym in English) at MIT have tested Polaris 200 web pages and makes pages load 34% faster on average.

http: //es.gizmodo.com/adios-para-sie …

it is best that Polaris is written in Javascript (hopefully not force us to resurrect the infamous Java Plugin), so it is not difficult to integrate in any current web browser. MIT officially presented at the upcoming symposium Polaris design and implementation of systems in USENIX, which will take place on 16 March network. [Via CSAIL]

Photo: iinspiration / Shutterstock

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