How To Reduce Web Hosting Bandwidth
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by Herman Drost April 01, 2004
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| Herman Drost |
Herman Drost is a Certified Internet Webmaster (CIW) owner and author of iSiteBuild.com Site Design and Low Cost Hosting from $30/year. (http://www.isitebuild.com)
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| Herman Drost
has written 5 articles for HostReview. |
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You just received a higher than normal monthly bill on your credit card for web
hosting. Your hosting company explains that you exceeded your monthly minimum
for "bandwidth usage" and suggests reducing the size of your web
site files.
What is bandwidth
usage?
What does bandwidth mean?
How much bandwidth do you need?
How can you reduce bandwidth usage?
Let's discuss
each of these topics in more depth.
What is "bandwidth
usage?"
This refers to
the total amount of information that has been served to your web site visitors
each month. Every file on your Web Site has a specific size (e.g. 22K). Every
time a visitor downloads that file, your bandwidth usage goes up by that
amount.
The larger the
file, the higher the bandwidth usage when it is downloaded. The more traffic
to your site, the more bandwidth you will use.
What does "bandwidth" mean?
Bandwidth refers
to the amount of data that can be transmitted in a fixed amount of time.
The "data transfer rate" is the speed with which data can be transmitted
from one device to another. Data rates are often measured in megabits (million
bits) or megabytes (million bytes) per second. These are usually abbreviated
as Mbps and Mbps, respectively.
Bits and Bytes
8 bits = 1 byte.
1,024 bytes = 1 kilobyte (Kb).
1,024 kilobytes (Kb) = 1 megabyte (mb or meg)
1,024 megabytes = 1 gigabyte (gb or gig)
How much bandwidth
do I need?
To determine how
much bandwidth you need, estimate the file size of each web page, and then
multiply it by the number of pages on your web site.
Multiply this
figure by the number of the number of page views you expect per month from
your site.
For example, if
your web page consists of two 15Kb images and 3Kb of html, you would have
33Kb of data for that page. Now multiply this by the number of page views
you expect to have per month (e.g. 100,000 per month). This would mean 3.3Gb
of data needs to be transferred per month for that page.
Now recalculate
this number for each page, and you'll know approximately how much bandwidth
your entire site requires.
How can you reduce
bandwidth usage?
The easy way is
to reduce the size of the files on your site, particularly images and other
graphics. For example, you have a large image (i.e. 200KB) on your web page
that is downloaded by each visitor every time the page is requested. If you
reduce this image to 20KB or remove it altogether, it will dramatically cut
your bandwidth usage. It will also speed up your site's performance.
For more information
on optimizing images for the Web, read my article, "Preparing Images
for Your Web Site", (www.isitebuild.com/imageoptimization2).
Web Sites that
have MP3s to download, movies, music playing in the background and large
images, will obviously have a higher bandwidth. Large web sites or sites
that expect a lot of traffic, will also use a lot.
If your site has
mainly html pages and small images, your bandwidth will not be that high.
Bandwidth Tools
Monitoring bandwidth
http://www.utoronto.ca/ucres/netup.htm
Web Page Checker
http://www.searchengineworld.com/cgi-bin/page_size.cgi
Tuning up your
Web Site
http://websitegarage.netscape.com/
Bandwidth Tips
If you make changes
to your site by adding more files and/or web pages, recalculate your web
site file size.
Estimate how many
visitors will be accessing your web pages over the next few months.
Recalculate the
bandwidth usage for your site. You may need more web space and bandwidth
for your site to function effectively.
Check with your
web hosting company to upgrade your hosting plan.
Conclusion
Now you can avoid
the shock of exceeding your monthly bandwidth usage and paying higher hosting
fees. You are now ready to receive more traffic to your site and therefore
make more sales. |