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Forums - PC - Google wants to make the Internet faster with new protocol

http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/spdy_google_wants_to_speed_up_the_web.php

Google has just announced  that it is working on a new protocol that will minimize latency and speed up the Web experience for users. SPDY (pronounced "speedy") is not meant to replace HTTP, the protocol that allows Web servers and browsers to talk to each other today, but it does augment HTTP. The new protocol incorporates features like multiplexed streams, request prioritization and HTTP header compression. Google has already developed a prototype Web server and a version  of Google Chrome with built-in SPDY support.

Google claims that pages loaded 64% faster in lab tests in which the research team downloaded the top 25 websites. Now that the SPDY team has developed workable prototypes, Google decided to open up the process and is soliciting the "active participation, feedback and assistance of the web community."

In today's announcement, Google stresses that SPDY is not a replacement for HTTP. It uses HTTP methods and headers, but it overrides the parts of the protocol that manage connections and data transfer formats.

Google will soon release its open-source SPDY-enabled Web server. The source code for the SPDY-enabled version of Chrome can be found here.

Creating a Faster and More Secure Web

According to the SPDY white paper, the project's goals are to reduce page load times by 50%, minimize deployment complexity and avoid the need for website owners to make any changes to their sites to implement SPDY. Instead, all the hard work will happen in the client and the Web server.

The team also wants SPDY to allow many concurrent HTTP requests to run across one TCP session and to make SSL the standard transport protocol.

Google clearly has an interest in making the Web experience as fast and secure as possible for its users. One of the reasons Google released its own browser was to get every other browser developer to focus on speed again. SPDY is even more ambitious. With SPDY, Google wants to change one of the most fundamental protocols on the Internet.

According to Google, these are the basic improvement of SPDY over HTTP:

  • Multiplexed requests. There is no limit to the number of requests that can be issued concurrently over a single SPDY connection.  Because requests are interleaved on a single channel, the efficiency of TCP is much higher.
  • Prioritized requests. Clients can request certain resources to be delivered first.  This avoids the problem of congesting the network channel with non-critical resources when a high-priority request is pending.
  • Compressed headers.  Clients today send a significant amount of redundant data in the form of HTTP headers.  Because a single Web page may require 50 or 100 subrequests, this data is significant. Compressing the headers saves a significant amount of latency and bandwidth compared to HTTP.
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Wow, go Google! Hopefully this will spread fast once it's done.
Maybe this is something ioi should show the guys hosting VGC


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:) Epic. Google FTW! One of the few companies I praise.



Google is quite amazing. I'm giving Chrome a shot once 4.0 releases, and one of my buddies should be getting me an invite to Wave soon.

Google is good for the internet!



I have absolutely no idea what that meant, but if it means a quicker internet, than I am all for it!

I would use chrome if there was an option to not keep any of my history without having to bother with incognito and if they had live bookmarks



Munkeh111 said:
I have absolutely no idea what that meant, but if it means a quicker internet, than I am all for it!

I would use chrome if there was an option to not keep any of my history without having to bother with incognito and if they had live bookmarks

Live bookmarks, as in this? http://chrome.blogspot.com/2009/11/bookmark-sync-and-more-speed-in-latest.html (watch the video)

Don't know about private browsing though (if that's what you mean).



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Woot!! Thats why I use Chrome



Microsoft better buy up google quick before its too late.

But anyways, Chrome is fast, but it has soooo many bugs that I just removed it, even tho firefox is as slow as internet explorer now, there is no other browser that has speed and no bugs.



Google is so freakin' awesome.

I wonder what motivates them to do stuff like this though. It's not like theres competition out there, right?



cgkc17 said:
Google is so freakin' awesome.

I wonder what motivates them to do stuff like this though. It's not like theres competition out there, right?

Well, yes, there are. Microsoft and Facebook being the two only real ones I think. Google is just way ahead in many areas

And maybe they just want to improve the overall experience you get when going online, who knows

Have you seen Google Wave? Here's a presentation about it: http://wave.google.com/help/wave/about.html#video

It's pretty long, but really shows how awesome Google is with their commitment to making the internet awesome



Rainbird said:
Munkeh111 said:
I have absolutely no idea what that meant, but if it means a quicker internet, than I am all for it!

I would use chrome if there was an option to not keep any of my history without having to bother with incognito and if they had live bookmarks

Live bookmarks, as in this? http://chrome.blogspot.com/2009/11/bookmark-sync-and-more-speed-in-latest.html (watch the video)

Don't know about private browsing though (if that's what you mean).

No, live bookmarks may not be the right phrase, but basically an RSS feed on the bookmarks toolbar and drop down RSS menu...