Does anyone find it necessary to reduce the pixel width and height and increase compression in order to achieve faster page load times?
Am I becoming obsessive about SEO?
I know that long page loading times can be a turn off for visitors and search engines take this into account. Clicking between panos in a tour results in 64 calls to the server. Loading a new pano appears to pull 3-4mb of jepgs.
My images are a little over 16,000 x 8,000 pixels and the resulting folders of tour jpegs are roughly 45mb each. I've experimented with compression and subsampling which can get a tour folder down to around 31mb, but reducing the images to 9000 x 4500 pixels offers a huge reduction to just 12mb. I've gone down to 60% on compression.
I'm assuming the majority of visitors (hoping I get some) will be on a smartphone, so are lower resolution images acceptable?
What pixel dimensions do you guys use and what level of compression? Is it possible to have the first pano at lower res and the remainder at a higher res to help with initial page download time? Does it even matter?
This is for a personnel hobby website, so whilst I would like to offer good image quality to visitors, I need to offer a compromise between image quality and speed of the website.