Mobileprocessors are generally designed for efficiency first, and performance comes in second. Mobiles have a weaker CPU architecture than desktops. Meaning they are less powerful in terms of speed processing.
Difference #2: The networks speed (network latency)
The bandwidth of a network refers to how quickly information can be transferred from a point to another. This speed is commonly measured in Megabits (Mbps).
A high Mbps number means that more traffic can flow through the connection without interruption. Network latency is the time it takes for the data to be sent to the network. Usually, mobile networks have a more important network latency than desktops.
Images are often the culprit for slowing down your WordPress site. They need to be optimized specifically for mobile devices. To make content readable on small screens, images need to be proportionally sized down.
A layout or design instability can negatively affect mobile users, especially if they are not expecting it. Too many sliders and animations can slow down pages, impact SEO and conversion rates. Google will penalize your site with a bad CLS (Cumulative Layout Shift) score in case of a sudden layout shift. This Core Web Vital will impact your final user experience score and affect your SEO visibility and traffic.
Optimizing image delivery is a key step in improving mobile page speed. You may need multiple servers to increase the speed of your rendered data anywhere in the world. This is exactly what a CDN is doing.
You need to have a fast hosting provider supporting Gzip compression if possible and a cache plugin to reduce the server processing time.
A plugin like WP Rocket can help you clean your database, activate Gzip compression, cache your pages, and much more.
A lighter page will be quicker to load on mobile. A heavy page will generally be caused by videos, images, scripts, styles, and fonts. The best way to reduce your page weight is to optimize your images, implement text compression (GZIP) and combine/minify the code.
Hello, thanks for helpful post. I'll try it. Now, I think about plugins for titles and descriptions. I usually use Yoast SEO, but there is The SEO Framework - my friend told me, that is faster than Yoast. Did you try compare this two plugins in combination with WP Rocket. I used WP rocket and Yoast SEO, but I need to speed up the website.
You can report any security bugs found in the source code of the site-reviews plugin through the Patchstack Vulnerability Disclosure Program. The Patchstack team will assist you with verification, CVE assignment and take care of notifying the developers of this plugin.
Enhancement: Allow tags to lazyload background images
Enhancement: Add tag to lazyloaded picture elements
Bugfix: Prevent a Fatal error related to the League Container package conflict with WooCommerce 4.4
Bugfix: Update lazyload for background images support for new version of lazyload script
Bugfix: Correctly apply the rocket-lazyload class on elements with a background-image and an empty class value
Bugfix: Correctly apply the rocket-lazyloadclass on elements with malformed HTML
Bugfix: Prevent a display issue with background-images when using different types of quotes around the URL
Bugfix: Prevent Layout from breaking when alt attribute has any html encoded characters
Enhancement: Add data-skip-lazy and skip-lazy class to exclusions list as part of the interoperability initiative between lazyload plugins
Enhancement: Use native lazyload only if filter rocket_use_native_lazyload is true
Enhancement: Apply lazyload on background images set on figure elements
Bugfix: Correctly add the rocket-lazyload class when class attribute is empty on an element with a background image
Bugfix: Correctly replace YouTube iframe with preview image when using relative protocol
Enhancement: Add support for browser native lazyload
Bugfix: Prevent broken image in some cases for picture element
Bugfix: Prevent wrong lazy attributes for srcset and sizes on an image inside a picture element
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