The World Wide Web Conference 2019
DOI: 10.1145/3308558.3313606
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Web Experience in Mobile Networks: Lessons from Two Million Page Visits

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Cited by 43 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…Figure 1, rows (1) and (2) describe this testbed and its usage. Different from previous studies [1], [2], [15]- [17], [19], which have studied Web QoE exclusively for desktop browsers and desktop devices (or in some exceptional cases, emulating mobile devices), our measurement testbed consists of three different, non-emulated types of devices, including a smartphone device (Google Pixel 2 XL), a tablet (Google Pixel Slate), and a desktop computer (laptop), using WPT agents for Android and Linux. Chrome (last stable version) is used as browser.…”
Section: Web-qoe Datasets and Modeling Approachcontrasting
confidence: 64%
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“…Figure 1, rows (1) and (2) describe this testbed and its usage. Different from previous studies [1], [2], [15]- [17], [19], which have studied Web QoE exclusively for desktop browsers and desktop devices (or in some exceptional cases, emulating mobile devices), our measurement testbed consists of three different, non-emulated types of devices, including a smartphone device (Google Pixel 2 XL), a tablet (Google Pixel Slate), and a desktop computer (laptop), using WPT agents for Android and Linux. Chrome (last stable version) is used as browser.…”
Section: Web-qoe Datasets and Modeling Approachcontrasting
confidence: 64%
“…For example, the impact of multiple features such as transport protocols and network performance on PLT and AFT is studied in [15], based on a set of 244 million measurements collected during 6 months for the top-10000 Alexa websites. Other papers also measured the impact of similar features on PLT and SI or AFT in different countries and different types of networks [16], including mobile ones [17]. Most of prior work has stayed at the application level, which is problematic for ISPs, who have no direct access to in-browser metrics.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Even with object reordering, Furtak et al have shown that increased bandwidth improves page Speed Index by permitting large images to load more quickly [6]. However, others have observed that the impact of extra bandwidth is less pronounced on Page Load Time (PLT) [11]. Han et al have shown that extra bandwidth improves the performance of large pages [12].…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%