Re: [WebDNA] Serial numbers and pricing for WebDNA 7.0
This WebDNA talk-list message is from 2011
It keeps the original formatting.
numero = 106132
interpreted = N
texte = Bill is the webdna.us site slow for you?-Dan--------------------------------------------------From: "William DeVaul"
Sent: Sunday, January 23, 2011 3:32 PMTo: Subject: Re: [WebDNA] Serial numbers and pricing for WebDNA 7.0> That makes sense. Even on pages where I have lots of processing> before HTML is returned, I never see more than 800 ms for an HTML> response on my older server. More than 1 second is a long time in web> server world, particularly with all the other elements (redirect,> large graphic, and JS). People are impatient.>> Bill>> On Sun, Jan 23, 2011 at 5:18 PM, wrote:>> Just wanted to add two things: one of the possible explanations for the >> relative slowness of the website could be because every single word from >> each text of each page is compared to a database in order to create >> dynamic links: all the links from the websites are in fact created "on >> the fly".>> About the speed differences depending on the days, i am pretty sure it is >> a matter of local bandwidth: the server is overpowered with an 8 cores >> Niagara processor and the load is always extremely low, less than 1%, >> while the available bandwidth server-side is huge.>>>> - chris> ---------------------------------------------------------> This message is sent to you because you are subscribed to> the mailing list .> To unsubscribe, E-mail to: > archives: http://mail.webdna.us/list/talk@webdna.us> Bug Reporting: support@webdna.us>
Associated Messages, from the most recent to the oldest:
Bill is the webdna.us site slow for you?-Dan--------------------------------------------------From: "William DeVaul" Sent: Sunday, January 23, 2011 3:32 PMTo: Subject: Re: [WebDNA] Serial numbers and pricing for WebDNA 7.0> That makes sense. Even on pages where I have lots of processing> before HTML is returned, I never see more than 800 ms for an HTML> response on my older server. More than 1 second is a long time in web> server world, particularly with all the other elements (redirect,> large graphic, and JS). People are impatient.>> Bill>> On Sun, Jan 23, 2011 at 5:18 PM, wrote:>> Just wanted to add two things: one of the possible explanations for the >> relative slowness of the website could be because every single word from >> each text of each page is compared to a database in order to create >> dynamic links: all the links from the websites are in fact created "on >> the fly".>> About the speed differences depending on the days, i am pretty sure it is >> a matter of local bandwidth: the server is overpowered with an 8 cores >> Niagara processor and the load is always extremely low, less than 1%, >> while the available bandwidth server-side is huge.>>>> - chris> ---------------------------------------------------------> This message is sent to you because you are subscribed to> the mailing list .> To unsubscribe, E-mail to: > archives: http://mail.webdna.us/list/talk@webdna.us> Bug Reporting: support@webdna.us>
"Dan Strong"
DOWNLOAD WEBDNA NOW!
Top Articles:
Talk List
The WebDNA community talk-list is the best place to get some help: several hundred extremely proficient programmers with an excellent knowledge of WebDNA and an excellent spirit will deliver all the tips and tricks you can imagine...
Related Readings:
Extra Text Fields (was Another question) (1997)
Can't load tmpl files (1997)
Site Builder & IE Mac (2004)
WebCat 2.1.3 (and docs) (1998)
Authenticate and IIS (1997)
Formatting dates stored in db (2003)
WebCat2 as a chat server? (1997)
Re:Running 2 two WebCatalog.acgi's (1996)
Need host (1998)
MOOOOOO (2000)
webCatalog and Stocks (1998)
[WebDNA] [ipaddress] - [RealIP] - Not working properly (2016)
WebCat2b13MacPlugIn - More limits on [include] (1997)
Date search and sendmail (1997)
pictures / referrer etc. (1998)
suffix mapping for NT? (1997)
Shownext never shows next...still (1997)
[Mac 3.0.8] Formulas.db Question (2003)
E-mail formating question (1999)
and vs or vs not (1998)