Remove c
article thumbnail

HTTP/3: Practical Deployment Options (Part 3)

Smashing Magazine

You would, however, be hard-pressed even today to find a good article that details the nuanced best practices. This is because, as I stated in the introduction to part 1 , much of the early HTTP/2 content was overly optimistic about how well it would work in practice, and some of it, quite frankly, had major mistakes and bad advice.

Network 104
article thumbnail

HTTP/3: Performance Improvements (Part 2)

Smashing Magazine

In those set-ups, however (if they’re done correctly), your device will typically keep its IP intact, because the transition between wireless base stations is done at a lower protocol layer. Let’s contemplate what would happen if A, B, and C were all render-blocking resources. This multiplexing can happen in many different ways.