Desktop and Mobile Web Page Comparison: Characteristics, Trends, and Implications
This provides insights for web developers and researchers on optimizing content delivery across devices, though it is incremental as it builds on existing web analysis.
The study tackled the problem of comparing desktop and mobile web page characteristics over two years, finding key differences in object requests, sizes, relationships, and caching, with trends indicating a shift towards mobile access.
The broad proliferation of mobile devices in recent years has drastically changed the means of accessing the World Wide Web. Describing a shift away from the desktop computer era for content consumption, predictions indicate that the main access of web-based content will come from mobile devices. Concurrently, the manner of content presentation has changed as well; web artifacts are allowing for richer media and higher levels of user interaction which is enabled through increasing access networks speeds. This article provides an overview of more than two years of high level web page characteristics by comparing the desktop and mobile client versions. Our study is the first long-term evaluation of differences as seen by desktop and mobile web browser clients. We showcase the main differentiating factors with respect to the number of web page object requests, their sizes, relationships, and web page object caching. We additionally highlight long-term trends and discuss their future implications.