Created
November 13, 2014 12:19
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I both agree and disagree, if that's possible... | |
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Agree: it's odd to talk about the page fold, where numerous usability studies prove that users scroll, | |
the web is a vertical medium, pages are long and the fold isn't a thing. | |
Disagree: it's odd to assume that what appears in that first viewport onto a page isn't higher-impact | |
for a user than the rest of the page. It sets tone, usually navigation / wayfinding, titles and introduces | |
what you're doing. It's your first impression. | |
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Agree: it's odd to consider 'above the fold' as the measure for where/how one inlines / prioritises CSS load. | |
Because there is no fold. | |
Disagree: it's odd to consider that inlining or prioritising CSS in some way (be that 'critical', 'skeleton', | |
'core' etc) is a bad idea, given that it can help perceptions of speed. | |
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Agree: this is a conversation that is in part prompted by those of us pushing RWD / device-agnostic builds | |
looking for yet more performance / perceived speed gains for page loading | |
Disagree: the conflicting advice (users scroll, there's no fold, but the a first impression is important | |
and there will be some first-viewport priorities) has been around for a long time before RWD came around. | |
So I'm not sure about setting it up as 'responsive design telling us' :) | |
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In summary; 'the fold' is just an unfortunate use of term. And the conversation around it / viewports / | |
critical css is way too nuanced for twitter limits! | |
B xo |
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