Sometimes the niftiest tools are the ones that have been around for the longest time.
I just came across Aptivate‘s loband, a wonderfully handy web service that’s been around since 2004. Loband lets you see highly-simplified versions of web pages, stripping out the fancy formatting and hefty graphics that can slow down users who don’t have broadband Internet connections – mobile users, for instance, or people in developing countries.
Users in low-bandwidth areas browse to the small Loband website, and then request the site they want to view. Loband then downloads the site, reduces it in size, and then sends it on to the user. This can significantly speed up the user’s browsing experience over a stable, low-bandwidth connection.
Loband requires no software download to function, works on most websites, and is automated and open-source.
Dandy. I’ve already come across one blog that links to its loband version as a way of offering users a lightweight alternative – very clever.
You won’t get pretty graphics with loband… or, really, any graphics. Here’s the Social Signal homepage as seen in Firefox:
And here’s the same homepage in loband:
That second version may not be pretty, but it’ll load a lot faster over a mobile or dial-up connection than our full site would.
I stumbled across loband thanks to a site (Patronus Analytical, which specializes in security for NGOs working in dangerous parts of the world) that’s using it to offer readers a low-bandwidth version. Not a bad idea, and one we’ll consider here at Social Signal.
In the meantime, feel free to browse us in low-bandwidth mode… and let us know if you find any glitches.