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Future versions of Google Chrome will feature built-in support for lazy loading, a mechanism to defer the loading of images and iframes if they are not visible on the user's screen at load time.
Google informally announced a new feature coming to Chrome. It will allow lazy-loading images and iframes with an HTML attribute, no JavaScript required. It will improve the user experience, which ...
Mozilla has added support for lazy loading of images and iframes in the latest Nightly build of Firefox. It's disabled by default but enabling it to try out is simple enough, here's how to do it.
Now Google is building the feature into its Chrome web browser — future versions of Chrome will automatically lazy load images and iframes by default, unless a web developer includes code that ...
Google has said before that they can't see lazy loaded content on mobile but said it is a tricky situation. That was back in 2015, about three years ago. Now, Google is going to work up some ...
This one was about lazy loading scroll events and how Google handles them. ... They have an e-commerce site and the products are changing rapidly and are lazy loaded with JavaScript scrolling events.
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