As far as page compression, I do that server side on my webserver. mod_deflate is the module for apache2 ... it's called something else (mod_gzip?) with apache1.
I'm behind a modem, unfortunately, and noticed a significant difference in page load times. I would think that html/txt/css compression would start to become a default setting on most web servers. Sean On Thu, 2003-10-30 at 06:42, Lucas wrote: > I can't remember the name now, but I know there's at least one program > to dynamically compress pages and reduce quality of the jpeg images. > Most browsers support compressed content and you are suposed to get an > extra boost because small files take less to load. > > --------------------- > Saludos, > Lucas mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > > --------------------- > Original message > >> > I just figured out how to use Webmin to change this. The reason I setup > >> > Squid is because I'm dialing-in to a server that's running on a partial > >> > T1. Right now, I have the server NAT'ing my connections out to the > >> > internet. I'm hoping to get a bit of a speed boost by using a proxy on > >> > the server instead. Am I wrong here? > > > -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
