Things You'll Need:
- Adobe Photoshop
- Paint Shop Pro
- Paint Shop Pro
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Step 1
Begin at the root of your page: Keep the background graphic simple or use a color for the background instead of a graphic.
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Step 2
Keep images small and use the HEIGHT and WIDTH Hypertext tags to specify size. Visit a Web site, such as GifCruncher, that will automatically reduce your GIF pictures without sacrificing quality.
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Step 3
Reduce the number of images used in general. The best Web pages are uncluttered, easy to read and fast.
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Step 4
Use the HR tag to insert a horizontal line instead of using a graphic line, which takes up space.
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Step 5
Create several small tables instead of one large table on the Web page. Each table has to load separately before the viewer can see the contents - with smaller tables, the viewer will see content loading faster.
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Step 6
Limit the number of advertisement banners on a Web page. Each advertisement banner must call up information from another site; if that site is slow, so is your page.
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Step 7
Keep the page short and simple. Create other pages for information that doesn't belong on the welcome page.
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Step 8
Use the same background, fonts and, if possible, images throughout your Web site. Once an image has been loaded, it usually remains in the viewer's cache file and does not have to be reloaded when a viewer visits another page with the same image.
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Step 9
Keep special effects, animations, scrolling text and other images to a minimum. These eye-catching effects can bog down a page.









Comments
Takumi86 said
on 11/22/2008 Cool, most of the tips are working, thanks
Geek said
on 7/3/2007 Very helpful tips. Thank you and I'll return to this as a reference page. Please keep it up. Good job