Post by account_disabled on Nov 30, 2023 4:09:45 GMT
Customers add Edgemesh Client via a one-click integration or a single line of code to their existing site. Plugins are currently available for WordPress, Shopify, and Cloudflare. The installation process is straightforward and takes about 5 minutes.
From there, the Edgemesh client adds two features: real-user monitoring (to show the site performance based on real customer experiences) and client-side caching. Edgemesh adds intelligent client-side caching via the Service Worker framework—a model originally designed to allow websites to function offline. This helps increase the content the browser can hold locally, reducing the customer’s requests to the server itself. This provides a material speed-up, but the magic comes from its “pre-cache” logic.
Based on real user interactions and performance metrics, Edgemesh intelligently expands the browser cache to ensure more assets are pre-loaded for users—essentially guessing where the customer will Country Email List go next and trying to stay one step ahead. The performance impact can be seen in the Edgemesh portal, with “Accelerated” users being those to whom the client-side cache served 10% or more of the page, and “Non-Accelerated” users being those who had little to no benefit from the client-side cache Edgemesh creates. Based on real customer case studies, the Edgemesh Client helps increase site speed by 20-40%.
The client also captures and powers a deep level of performance data. This data is gathered from real users on your website—field data. There are multiple competitors in this space, including New Relic, App Dynamics, and Datadog—but the Edgemesh portal is geared toward displaying performance data in pre-analyzed ways that we found intuitive.
For example, each performance metric has predefined levels of what is considered Fast, Average and Slow (color coded for simplicity)—allowing anyone to identify areas that need improvement quickly. Every performance metric available for analysis is captured, and performance can be broken down by device, operating system, geography, or per page. In addition, the portal shows API-level timing data—allowing you to see the impact third-party scripts and applications have on your site’s performance, again with quick links to show slow apps only.
From there, the Edgemesh client adds two features: real-user monitoring (to show the site performance based on real customer experiences) and client-side caching. Edgemesh adds intelligent client-side caching via the Service Worker framework—a model originally designed to allow websites to function offline. This helps increase the content the browser can hold locally, reducing the customer’s requests to the server itself. This provides a material speed-up, but the magic comes from its “pre-cache” logic.
Based on real user interactions and performance metrics, Edgemesh intelligently expands the browser cache to ensure more assets are pre-loaded for users—essentially guessing where the customer will Country Email List go next and trying to stay one step ahead. The performance impact can be seen in the Edgemesh portal, with “Accelerated” users being those to whom the client-side cache served 10% or more of the page, and “Non-Accelerated” users being those who had little to no benefit from the client-side cache Edgemesh creates. Based on real customer case studies, the Edgemesh Client helps increase site speed by 20-40%.
The client also captures and powers a deep level of performance data. This data is gathered from real users on your website—field data. There are multiple competitors in this space, including New Relic, App Dynamics, and Datadog—but the Edgemesh portal is geared toward displaying performance data in pre-analyzed ways that we found intuitive.
For example, each performance metric has predefined levels of what is considered Fast, Average and Slow (color coded for simplicity)—allowing anyone to identify areas that need improvement quickly. Every performance metric available for analysis is captured, and performance can be broken down by device, operating system, geography, or per page. In addition, the portal shows API-level timing data—allowing you to see the impact third-party scripts and applications have on your site’s performance, again with quick links to show slow apps only.