Congrats Google Team: Joshua Marantz and Ilya Grigorik. for your relentless efforts to bring in such a wonderful results in a short span of two years. Keep Going! Best Regards! PV And Associates Secunderabad, A P, India I am sharing this news into my blog page Thanks again for sharing this. Best
Yes, this is being worked on: https://github.com/pagespeed/ngx_pagespeed
Until it's ready, you can experiment and/or deploy mod_pagespeed with mod_proxy with nginx as the origin. See https://developers.google.com/speed/docs/mod_pagespeed/experiment#Trying out mod_pagespeed using mod_proxy
Congrats Google Team: Joshua Marantz and Ilya Grigorik. for your relentless efforts to bring in such a wonderful results in a short span of two years.
ReplyDeleteKeep Going!
Best Regards!
PV And Associates
Secunderabad, A P, India
I am sharing this news into my blog page
Thanks again for sharing this.
Best
Thank you team !
ReplyDeleteI hope to test this mod and see beautiful results ;)
Awesome work on the Apache mod. Hope you continue to innovate in numerous and popular fields in the future.
ReplyDeleteI've applied several times now and have not been accepted. Any particular criteria they are looking for?
ReplyDeletemod_pagespeed requires no application; just download the module & install it. https://developers.google.com/speed/pagespeed/mod
DeleteOops, I had this confused with the Pagespeed "service."
DeleteGreat, this is really one of the best application to check the page speed. Thanks
ReplyDeleteLooks interesting, going to run it by my developer friends and see where it goes.
ReplyDeleteThis should be good for mobile sites as well since they have a hard time loading pages many times.
"Users prefer faster sites and we have seen that faster pages lead to higher user engagement, conversions, and retention."
Nice!
thanks for sharing the info...
ReplyDeleteIs there any way to implement this on a blogger blog?
ReplyDeleteCan this be integrated with nginx powered sites? All the references I'm seeing are for Apache.
ReplyDeleteYes, this is being worked on: https://github.com/pagespeed/ngx_pagespeed
DeleteUntil it's ready, you can experiment and/or deploy mod_pagespeed with mod_proxy with nginx as the origin. See https://developers.google.com/speed/docs/mod_pagespeed/experiment#Trying out mod_pagespeed using mod_proxy