Microsoft today announced that its Edge browser for Windows 10 now uses the Brotli compression algorithm, following in the steps of Chrome earlier this year and Firefox last year. Google open-sourced ...
While online content continues to develop, grow and become increasingly complex and media-rich, Google has been working to keep it fast and efficient. Last September it announced a new compression ...
Google Chrome may be one of the fastest browsers around, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t room for improvement. Luckily, the team behind the venerable Internet browser hasn’t been sitting idle.
Google is introducing a new compression algorithm named Brotli, which it says can reduce file sizes up to 26 percent over existing solutions. The increased density is achieved by “a 2nd order context ...
Bingbot is now rolling out Brotli compression for its web crawler, Bingbot. Fabrice Canel from Microsoft said on X that Bing "enabled it on a small percentage of URLs crawled each day, and we'll ...
Google saw the truth in the "less is more" saying, so it adapted its compression algorithms to allow its Google Chrome mobile users to spend as little mobile data as possible, when streaming. Two ...
Fabrice Canel from Microsoft announced that BingBot now fully supports Brotli compression and will soon be testing zstd Zstandard compression, a lossless data compression, for its crawler. Fabrice ...
In September 2015 Google announced a new compression algorithm for the Internet "Brotli" in open source, but it turned out that Brotli implementation is scheduled for Google Chrome. Ilya Grigorik, ...
Take advantage of ASP.Net Core’s support for response compression middleware to get more compression in less time using Brotli When working with RESTful services that leverage the ASP.Net Core Web API ...
Google has released the code behind a new compression algorithm, dubbed Brotli, under an open-source licence in the hopes it will be widely adopted by web browsers. Part of the advertising giant's ...