They might not be wearing a mask and
carrying a gun, but if you’ve got images
on your web pages then they could be
costing you a lot more money than you
think every time a visitor looks at one.
That’s because image files are typically
the biggest bandwidth user on any web
page. Whenever a visitor’s browser is
displaying an image on your site, it’s
actually downloading that image to the
local user’s hard drive. When anything
gets downloaded, it uses bandwidth and
bandwidth costs money. The moral of that
story is: The bigger the image the more
bandwidth it consumes.
If you are
hosting a popular photo gallery site, or
you are an ISP with clients who have a
lot of images on their sites, than it is
entirely possible that most of your
bandwidth is being eaten up by images!
Every good problem deserves a
solution
There is a solution, however, and
it’s a relatively simple and easy
solution at that. It’s called image
compression. What sounds like some sort
of geek-speak is really just a simple
procedure that squeezes the extra bloat
out of web-hosted images without
noticeably affecting their visual
quality.
When an image gets compressed it
naturally reduces the overall file size,
and it’s that file size which causes
images to eat up so much bandwidth.
NOT compressing your images is a lot
like leaving the water running in the
sink while you brush your teeth. You’re
just pouring money down the drain.
The Trick to Simple, Server-side
Image Compression
The key to saving wasted bandwidth
and accelerating the image download
process is to use advance image
compression scripts that you simply
install on your web server and let users
compress images. The good ones will
calculate image compression ratios on
the fly and always deliver the smallest
possible file size without sacrificing
quality, and it will allow the user to
do all of this!
The end result is a bandwidth savings
that can run as high as 50% or more on
image-intensive sites. And THAT is a
solution worth installing.
So whether you are an ISP who is
looking to reduce the amount of
bandwidth that your clients consume, or
you are a webmaster who is paying way
too much in bandwidth fees, the solution
to expanding your wallet just could very
well be compressing your images.
About the author:
Roderick Coleman is the developer of the
powerful HTML/Image compressor available
at
http://www.optimizehosting.com. It‘s
a money-saving utility that ISPs can
used to increase sales by giving the
service to their clients, and webmasters
can use to increase their site’s
performance, while reducing bandwidth
usage.