uuid: - value: 2d89873f-8f15-4e92-9f72-1a83855d3d82 langcode: - value: en type: - target_id: daily_email target_type: node_type target_uuid: 8bde1f2f-eef9-4f2d-ae9c-96921f8193d7 revision_timestamp: - value: '2025-05-11T09:00:01+00:00' revision_uid: - target_type: user target_uuid: b8966985-d4b2-42a7-a319-2e94ccfbb849 revision_log: { } status: - value: true uid: - target_type: user target_uuid: b8966985-d4b2-42a7-a319-2e94ccfbb849 title: - value: 'Small and fast' created: - value: '2025-02-12T00:00:00+00:00' changed: - value: '2025-05-11T09:00:01+00:00' promote: - value: false sticky: - value: false default_langcode: - value: true revision_translation_affected: - value: true path: - alias: /daily/2025/02/12/small-and-fast langcode: en body: - value: |
Due to an local outage, I've had no broadband connection and been mostly offline for the last few days.
The only connection I've had is a weak 4G signal from my mobile phone that I've been able to tether from to check emails, etc.
But this is slow and I struggled to load the majority of websites.
Some would take a number of seconds or minutes to load, or fail.
As websites and applications develop and grow, it's important to try and keep your codebase as lean and performant as possible.
You never know what connection people will be using your code from.
What if their broadband goes down or they're in an area with a poor mobile signal?
They may not be able to download your large CSS or JS file, or execute the unoptimised database query.
You can't assume everyone will be using a high speed Internet connection, so avoid feature bloat, optimise for performance and keep things small and fast.
format: full_html processed: |Due to an local outage, I've had no broadband connection and been mostly offline for the last few days.
The only connection I've had is a weak 4G signal from my mobile phone that I've been able to tether from to check emails, etc.
But this is slow and I struggled to load the majority of websites.
Some would take a number of seconds or minutes to load, or fail.
As websites and applications develop and grow, it's important to try and keep your codebase as lean and performant as possible.
You never know what connection people will be using your code from.
What if their broadband goes down or they're in an area with a poor mobile signal?
They may not be able to download your large CSS or JS file, or execute the unoptimised database query.
You can't assume everyone will be using a high speed Internet connection, so avoid feature bloat, optimise for performance and keep things small and fast.
summary: null field_daily_email_cta: { }