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Optimizing W3C Validation Buttons

By Chad Butler 1 Comment

I was recently working on one of my sites and had added the W3C buttons for valid XHTML and CSS (which actually validate, by the way). I regularly run speed reports on my sites as well and when I added these two buttons, I was not pleased with the result. Call me picky, but the extra image weight wasn’t necessary for what these buttons are. Since they are more for show and don’t really serve purpose for the user, why add the weight?

So I took the buttons and reduced the number of colors in the gif to see what we could do without onhealthy.net losing too much in the way of image quality. The originals were 128 colors. I found the least I could reduce it to and without losing too much quality was 16 colors. The results were pretty good, I think. The XHTML button was reduced in size from 1.68k to 805 bytes. The CSS was even better going from 1.23k to 656 bytes. Now I can load both buttons for less than the cost of the original XHTML button.

Here are the results. Feel free to use them in place of the originals (if your pages do in fact validate).

Original (128 colors) Optimized (16 colors)
w3c xhtml button - 128 colors w3c xhtml button - 16 colors
w3c css button - 128 colors w3c css button - 16 colors
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Filed Under: Web Tagged With: design, tips, Web, webdev

Sage: a feed reader for Firefox

By Chad Butler Leave a Comment

Back in my (not so long ago) IE days, I was using Pluck as an RSS reader. I liked it, it was handy. Now that I switched to Firefox, I had to find something for RSS. Nice thing about Firefox, there are a lot of plugins available.

Sage seems to fit the bill. It has a sidebar for the feeds like Pluck did in IE. So far, so good. If you use Firefox (you do use Firefox, don’t you?), Sage would be a nice plugin to add. If you know of a better RSS reader for Firefox, let me know.

Sage: a feed reader for Firefox

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Filed Under: Web Tagged With: firefox, rss, tools, webdev

Sometimes Ironic

By Chad Butler Leave a Comment

I was about to post yesterday about BrowseHappy. I had been meaning to for sometime, then yesterday I had the urge to post about it. Then, for whatever reason, I didn’t. So what about that is ironic?

It seems that yesterday, an announcement was made by the Web Standards Project (another fabulous site, by the way) with the headline

BrowseHappy Now Part of WordPress as WaSP Refocuses Mission

Appearently, WaSP felt that BrowseHappy compromised its position by infering a lack of neutrality toward various browsers. That makes sense to me, since BrowseHappy really promotes Mozilla browsers (and specifically, IMO, Firefox). So…

to make a long story short WordPress.org will be taking Browse Happy under its wing by continuing hosting the site and keeping it current with the latest trends and information.

Browse Happy logo

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Filed Under: Web, WordPress Tagged With: firefox, webdev, WordPress

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