Web accelerator: Difference between revisions

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Capitalization (This is Evice on a different computer; I'm too lazy to log in)
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* They may [[data compression|compress]] documents to a smaller size, for example by reducing the quality of [[digital image|images]] or by sending only what's changed since the document was last requested.
* They may [[filter (software)|filter]] out ads and other undesirable objects so they are not sent to the client at all.
* They may maintain persistent [[Transmission_Control_ProtocolTransmission Control Protocol|TCP]] connections between the client and the proxy server.
 
Web accelerators may be installed on the client (browsing) computer or on ISP hosted servers or both. Accelerating delivery through compression requires some type of host based server to collect, compress and then deliver content to a client computer.
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As of June 2005, these applications generally serve to improve [[dial-up]] and other low speed connections. Many users can achieve a 2 to 3 times speed increase in average browsing experience, while some report a 5 to 10 times speed increases for specific web pages.
 
[[Google]]'s [[Google_Web_AcceleratorGoogle Web Accelerator|Web Accelerator]] has attempted to improve [[broadband]] access to the sites. Moreover, they are designed for web browsing and, sometimes, for e-mailing and can not improve speeds of [[streaming]], gaming, P2P downloads or many other internetInternet applications. Many ISPs offer web accelerators as a part of their dial up service.
 
Some web accelerators have been very controversial pieces of software. Critics claim that prefetching HTML page links slows the internet backbone. Others suggest that the accelerators overload web servers with prefetching and cache freshening behaviors.