tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8994561579739999989.post5087369203308701553..comments2024-02-28T10:15:50.335+02:00Comments on Lotus Evangelist: Is Quickr Caching data between Sites?Keith Brookshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11107190540208956954noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8994561579739999989.post-52342264285831826282009-10-02T17:50:43.584+02:002009-10-02T17:50:43.584+02:00Garth,
I understand what you describe. But what if...Garth,<br />I understand what you describe. But what if the html file doesn't ask to get the movie from youtube and just lists the name?<br />Would this still work this way?Keith Brookshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11107190540208956954noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8994561579739999989.post-89441465350491635392009-10-02T17:17:32.148+02:002009-10-02T17:17:32.148+02:00Quickr will only cache web pages on a per user bas...Quickr will only cache web pages on a per user basis once the user has been to the page. You can restrict this further to just pages that don't contain any data if you want.<br /><br />The Quickr server will never cache objects that reside on external servers but will cache the HTML reference to it. So if you load page1 on a Quickr server and it references a youtube video it will send the HTML to the browser and cache the HTML page for the user. The browser can cache the actual youtube video. Then if the user goes to another Quickr page which also references the video and the user has not been to this page, the Quickr server will generate and send the HTML down to browser but the browser may not make a request for the video as the URL to the video hasn't changed (even if you have altered the other HTML attributes). The end result is that the video will run as soon as the HTML has rendered.Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02420556842224137040noreply@blogger.com