Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments
OSTG
Thinkgeek
Slashdot
NewsForge
Linux.com
ITMJ
IT Product Guide
SourceForge
freshmeat
Newsletters
Slashcode
Slash Open Source Project
Navigation
About
FAQ
Journals
Messages
Topics
Editors
Older Stuff
Past Polls
Submit Story
Create Account/Log in
Stuff
Brian (aka Krow)
Pudge
ACS
Tangent
Use Perl
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Using mod_gzip with slash, running ok.
More
|
Login
The Fine Print:
The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
Without JavaScript enabled, you might want to use
the classic discussion system
instead. If you
login
, you can remember this preference.
Using mod_gzip with slash, running ok.
2
Comments
More
|
Login
/
Full
Abbreviated
Hidden
More
|
Login
Please Log In to Continue
Log In
Nickname
Password
Public Terminal
[
Create a new account
]
Loading... please wait.
What does mod_gzip do for us?
(
Score:1
)
by
rizzo (2828)
OK so I haven't read anything about it yet and lazily decided to post here first. Anyway, what benefit does slash/httpd get out of having mod_gzip? I'm totally unfamiliar with mod_gzip, so this isn't a cynical question, I honestly am interested.
--
END OF LINE.
Re:What does mod_gzip do for us?
(
Score:1
)
by
Micah (1747)
<
micah AT 'ABSOLU ... s4christ DOT org
> on Wednesday October 31 2001, @01:29AM (
#3567
)
Homepage
what benefit??? It LITERALLY cuts the bandwidth use by the HTML pages from about 60K to about 6K! If you're paying for traffic, that's some benefit!
--
Yoder Internet Development
[yoderdev.com]: Honest and Affordable Web Solutions
Parent
Get More Comments
What does mod_gzip do for us? (Score:1)
END OF LINE.
Re:What does mod_gzip do for us? (Score:1)
Yoder Internet Development [yoderdev.com]: Honest and Affordable Web Solutions
Parent