We’re all accessing the Internet every day, but with so many browsers on the market — from Safari to Opera to Mozilla Firefox— it’s sometimes hard to pick just one. We’ll even learn new hacks on how to get to the page we want faster, like this Chrome omnibus kit. With their latest update to Chrome, however, Google hopes to blow the competition out of the water.

The tech company is implementing a new algorithm into the browser they’re calling the Brotli (which, the folks at Gizmodo reports, means “small bread” in Swiss German. Um, okay). The algorithm works by compressing the code on sites, which allows pages to load up to 25 percent faster. That sounds incredible.

According to Google, their engineers have been tinkering with Brotli for a while now, but it’s finally ready for its close up. Plus, good news for mobile users, “the smaller compressed size would give additional benefits to mobile users,” writes Zoltan Szabadka, a Compression Team Software Engineer at Google, “such as lower data transfer fees and reduced battery use.”

Lower data fees, better battery life and faster loading? Sounds like a win-win-win to us!


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