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Unless you know that your main viewers are going to be on high speed connections, my advice would be to always assume the slower 56k (quite often slower) connection speed.
That means that if your pages don't load completely in under 5 to 10 seconds, you will lose a great many of your visitors.
jmho,
robert
yourdomain.com/index.html (the enter page)
yourdomain.com/highspeed.html
yourdomain.com/lowspeed.html
if you have many pages that need high speed then you might want to just create two complete sites with the enter page linking to them.
My opinion is that you shouldn't do this at all if your goal is to sell something. (unless you are selling graphic design)
Why lose half your prospects before you can even get them in the door.
Many many people will just leave when they see an "enter" page.
make it easy for people to see what you have to offer.
robert
I figure if my page loads fast with 56k, it must really, really scream at 100mb.
I agree. However, if the vast majority of your users will be on broadband then create content especially for them.
Personally, slow pages on a dial-up connection can be a real pain. Too slow and users will go elsewhere.
Yes, trimming things down for 56k connections is a great idea if you have a commercial site, that way most of the 'market' will have the patience to wait for what they seek and you won't lose any visitors because of their slow connection and your graphics. Which is important because, again if you have a commercial site, you'll want to have commercial goals to deal with (your products selling or not selling because of your targeted market, advertising, links, etc) instead of having to reason around guesstimates about how many potential clients you lost because of your site's inaccessability to slow users.
She is right, of course, she is the mom:)
robert