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Explicit Trusted Proxy in HTTP/2.0: http://lauren.vortex.com/archive/001076.html — trust us: we won’t spy on your banking. We just cache it!
Tuesday, 25-Feb-14 10:29:38 UTC von web-
Ever since the DRM proposals the W3C should've been completely disbanded. And if they had any credibility left whatsoever, HTTP 2.0 would still be plain text and not binary. The 'performance' excuse they make for it barely has any merit ei…
drak gefällt das. -
Actually, I'd say it could even possibly slow things down. Instead of sending everything in one go, you would need to dereference each string element and *then* send it. And that's only if i'm not misinterpretting the W3C's definition of '…
drak gefällt das. -
wait, HTTP 2.0 is *binary*??? in the face of compression that’s almost useless - but actively harmful to debugging.
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Debugging being complete hell is the most significant problem with it. Here I was thinking HTTP 1.x was complex enough.
drak gefällt das. -
On the “upside”, this will reduce the number of capable HTTP2.0-servers and libraries, so the remaining ones are easier to target…
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I wouldn't worry about 2.0 adoption though. This fact alone would probably deter every sane developer from considering it for a VERY long time.
drak gefällt das. -
“HTTP/2 provides the ability to multiplex HTTP requests and responses” ← this will get people to adopt it. Should halve latency.
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Plain text protocols are also capable of this - they just designed HTTP completely wrong from the start.
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yes, plaintext protocols could be capable of this, but they aren’t pushed forward. A worse solution can win, if it is pushed enough.
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