As you may have noticed, since yesterday we have added again support for Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP) Google project on our pages.
Accelerated Mobile Pages is an open source web publishing technology designed to improve the performance of web content and advertisements. The Google-led AMP project competes with Facebook's Instant Articles, a similar project that has roughly the same goals.
According to Google:
Accelerated Mobile Pages Advantages
Faster landing pages usually lead to more conversions, and AMP allows you to create pages that load quickly. Combining speed and smoother loading, AMP destination pages often provide users with a better relative experience. Landing page experience is an important factor for Quality Score and Ad Rank.
How It Works
AMP loads fast because it is designed for speed. The programms tours easier (and therefore faster) to interpret AMP HTML code because it's optimized and specifically designed to help developers avoid common coding problems that lead to slow page loads.
Why did we turn off AMP about a year ago?
In the how-to Google briefly mentions that the feature achieves fast load times by using AMP HTML code. This was initially also the disadvantage. THE projection pages with minimal HTML and JavaScript allows content to be hosted in Google's AMP cache. Google can then serve this cached version to users directly when they click on the link in the search results.
AMP uses a restrictive HTML / JS set, which is prohibitive for many other features. Originally, the AMP code did not allow a script to write, fill out forms of communication, or shop online.
AMP didn't display your navigation menus, any side content, or other content-finding features of your site. So the fact caused significant drop on page views from mobile users.
Why did we re-enable it?
Initially we should mention that there are too many developers involved in the development of AMP pages, and are trying to overcome the above problems.
But the logic of Accelerated Mobile Pages also represents us as an idea: fast pages without unnecessary "burdens". The regular page of iGuRu.gr is built on this idea, hitting incredible loading times.
So the question we had to answer was very simple: Do we want more user interactions, such as click on the sidebar widgets, or subscribe to newsletters or a better ranking?
For the first we have proved that we are a little interested :).
So Google AMP is back here. Enjoy the new pages.