This works well with JS Animation, but what about CSS Transition?
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If data shows CSS transitions are a bottleneck, I'd use Client Hints on the server to detect low device memory and conditionally drop the animations early.
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Nice, I'm glad my demo project was useful :)
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It was! The changes needed to add adaptive animation toggling were straightforward thanks to a solid base
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How exactly does one determine whether a device is fast or slow?
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Was wondering the same. I'd build a score with a combination of network speed + main thread time for a task + feature detection
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I recall a time, when dual core ARM devices with 512 MB RAM (Lumia 520) ran an OS and multiple apps with fluent transitions (when written in XAML). We're talking about web pages eating ~256 MBs alone and having to turn off animations on "low mem devices"?https://twitter.com/nagyegrimate/status/1221889056075894785?s=19 …
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I'd love to take a look at some XAML apps hitting 60fps on the 520. Recommendations? Unfortunately experience with low-end desktops (long refresh cycles) and cheap ($20) phones has been more janky with animations.
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I saw a report that said: 2/3 of respondents would give up interactive elements & animations for faster load times 1/3 even said they’d give up images. I’ll see if I can find it. We really have to be honest & ask ourselves are we designing for our priorities or the user’s?
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Would love to take a read! Seeing large sites (e.g Facebook) leveraging similar techniques as many users are on older desktop and mobile hardware that can't handle animations quite as well.
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Čini se da učitavanje traje već neko vrijeme.
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