Chrome for Android plans to "speed up" by passing traffic through a remote server
It seems that Chrome developers for Android OS will soon add to the browser an interesting (and probably useful for many) feature. When a request is made to view a specific web resource, the traffic will be transmitted through remote servers (owned by Google, of course), where the page will be optimized before being sent to the device itself. According to the plan, this will allow the browser to load data faster than usual. Of course, many browsers, including the popular Opera Mini, are able to do this. But there is a difference.
And the difference is that the traffic will be passed through the SPDY proxy server of Google. In general, such a “feature” for users using high-capacity wireless networks is almost imperceptible. But for those who connect to the network via GPRS (and I suspect there are a lot of such users among the representatives of the habrasoobshchestva), this can be very useful. ')
It is worth noting that the announcement of a new feature has not yet been made, the developer François Beaufort saw the novelties, viewing commits of the Chromium source code . Everything