- Mailing Lists
- in
- A Crash Course on Content-Delivery Networks (CDN)
Archives
- By thread 3808
-
By date
- June 2021 10
- July 2021 6
- August 2021 20
- September 2021 21
- October 2021 48
- November 2021 40
- December 2021 23
- January 2022 46
- February 2022 80
- March 2022 109
- April 2022 100
- May 2022 97
- June 2022 105
- July 2022 82
- August 2022 95
- September 2022 103
- October 2022 117
- November 2022 115
- December 2022 102
- January 2023 88
- February 2023 90
- March 2023 116
- April 2023 97
- May 2023 159
- June 2023 145
- July 2023 120
- August 2023 90
- September 2023 102
- October 2023 106
- November 2023 100
- December 2023 74
- January 2024 75
- February 2024 75
- March 2024 78
- April 2024 74
- May 2024 108
- June 2024 98
- July 2024 116
- August 2024 134
- September 2024 130
- October 2024 141
- November 2024 171
- December 2024 64
A Crash Course on Content-Delivery Networks (CDN)
A Crash Course on Content-Delivery Networks (CDN)
Latest articlesIf you’re not a subscriber, here’s what you missed this month. To receive all the full articles and support ByteByteGo, consider subscribing: In the era of the modern web, latency can directly impact an organization’s bottom line. Here are some stats from a study by Portent:
One of the most effective strategies to reduce latency is using a Content-Delivery Network or a CDN. A CDN is a geographically distributed network of servers that work together to deliver fast and reliable content delivery across the globe. When a user requests content from a website or application that uses a CDN, the request is redirected to the nearest CDN server, which serves the content to the user. This reduces the distance data travels and improves overall performance. Think of a CDN like an ATM. If money were available only from one bank branch in town, everyone would have to make a time-consuming trip to that branch. With ATMs in every locality, everyone has fast and easy access to money. The market size for CDN-related solutions is expected to reach nearly $38 billion by 2028, with companies like Akamai, Cloudflare, and Amazon CloudFront investing heavily in improving their CDN offerings. Why the Need for a CDN?...Continue reading this post for free, courtesy of Alex Xu.A subscription gets you:
© 2024 ByteByteGo |
by "ByteByteGo" <bytebytego@substack.com> - 11:36 - 6 Jun 2024