๐Ÿ”— The small web is beautiful

However, itโ€™s not just about raw size, but about an โ€œethos of smallโ€. Itโ€™s caring about the users of your site: that your pages download fast, are easy to read, have interesting content, and donโ€™t load scads of JavaScript for Google or Facebookโ€™s trackers.
Ben really hit the nail on the head with this one. The small web really lines up with my goals for Tanzawa โ€“ maybe this desire to return to a smaller, more independent web is part of a larger trend?
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  • I bookmarked this post over on the Tanzawa blog, but I felt this post was worth a proper response on my regular blog. Benโ€™s thinking about the small web overlaps a lot with what I think: the small web is beautiful. Not just small size (so itโ€™s fast, uses less power and so forth), but as he says an โ€œethos of smallโ€. He expands to say we should use smaller images and fewer scripts. (Consistent, no-nonsense, efficient and lazy loading images were actually a major motivating factor for me starting Tanzawa) While Ben extends this ethos of small about caring about your users โ€“ I feel it goes a step further than that. An โ€œethos of smallโ€ is about respecting your readers. Respect that they may not be on the latest and greatest machine. Respect they might be on a limit Internet plan. Respect they might be running on battery. Respect their (and your) privacy. The small web is about โ€œjust enoughโ€. Just enough code. Just enough html/css/Javascript. Just enough infrastructure. We are the small web: Just enough.