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Ramblings from the Pingdom team about the Internet and web tech

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Roller coaster website performance?

Have you ever noticed if your site tends to perform great during part of the day, only to slow down to a crawl at other times? You may be suffering from what we here at Pingdom sometimes call the roller coaster syndrome.

For example, below is a real-world example for the popular social music site Last.fm from the end of February this year. Every spike in this graph occurs in the evening, Central European Time, like clockwork. The graph shows the time it took to load the HTML page.

Load time increase every evening
Above: HTML load time for Last.fm late in February.

As you can see, the average time to load the HTML page for Last.fm more than doubled during what we assume is its peak hours.

A website with a vast majority of its visitors coming from a specific region, such as for example just the UK, or Europe, or USA, may find the performance of its website looking more or less like a roller coaster every day, just as the Last.fm example.

It’s even easier to see if you average the hours of the day over a longer time period, such as here below (which is generated from the same data and time period as the graph above):

Average response time per hour
Above: Since this diagram is an average of several days, the more dramatic peaks of the graph have been smoothed out a bit, but in return we get a clear view of where the general “problem areas” are.

Looking at the graph, together with this diagram, leads us to believe that Last.fm may have a predominantly European audience.

Here you can easily see that the load time peaks at 20:00-21:00 CET. As can be expected if the majority of the users are European, the load on the site seems to be significantly lower during night time and early morning.

(We would like to point out that Last.fm has improved the performance of their site significantly in the last couple of months, and you can no longer see this roller coaster behavior.)

It should be mentioned that similar patterns can also be found in cases where for example daily backups or other scripts are run at certain hours, slowing down server performance while they are running.

So what does this mean? It means you should keep a close eye on your website’s performance during peak hours. Not only is that when your website will be at its slowest, it is when you have the most users (so making a good impression is a very good idea). If you see your website start having this kind of roller coaster performance, then it is time to start thinking about scaling it up.

The screenshots above are taken from Pingdom.

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Pingdom Podcast #6

Pingdom’s Podcast is a weekly show about Internet, web, security, and mobile stuff.

In this show, Saleh also gives us an update on the pending approval of his Carbon for Windows Phone Twitter client. We also talked about Nokia’s recent financial results, if Google Chrome can hit more than 50% market share this year, and the recent privacy-blunder by the guys behind the Path mobile app.

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There’s no denying that Google Chrome continues to be the darling of the web browser market. And as we predicted in July last year, Chrome overtook Firefox around November 2011.

So now the question is, when will Google also wrestle down Internet Explorer, and become the undisputed king of the browser world? In December 2011, Chrome 15 became the most popular browser in the world, beating Internet Explorer 8, but if you combine all IE versions, Microsoft still holds the number 1 spot.

Equipped with the latest web browser statistics from StatCounter, we set out to see when Chrome is likely to achieve more than 50% market share.

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Up or not? Keep track of your favorite US sports websites

Want to see how your favorite US sports site is doing, if it has a perfect 100% uptime score or not? If you want to check the latest scores and it isn’t working, could it be a problem with your computer or connection, or the site? We’ve got the solution for you!

For some time now we’ve been monitoring 34 major US sports and news sites related to sports. Our recent articles on the Super Bowl are a result of that monitoring.

Now you can look at how these sites are doing yourself on the public reports page for this list of US sports websites.

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Google Maps turns 7 years old – amazing facts and figures

Who has not used Google Maps? Raise your hand! Since the launch 7 years ago, Google Maps has become the de facto map service that users around the world go to for all their mapping needs.

As we say Happy Birthday to Google Maps, read on to find out some of the critical milestones in its history, and some amazing numbers and statistics.

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In 2010, there were just over 1 million secure Internet websites worldwide. Almost half of those, or 446,992 to be exact, were located in the United States.

But in which country can we find the most secure websites in relation to population? The answer may surprise you.

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