I propose lazy loading posts instead of serving all of them up on load to reduce latency on both the client and server.
That is an interesting request, specially because I'm under the impression load times for Stack Overflow pages is pretty good if not excellent, specially at the server side. You might experience lag if your internet connection is slow but you need to make serious efforts to compensate for lack of band-width at a client.
Let's analyze what we're talking about. I suggest reading How do I measure request and response times at once using cURL? because I'm using that approach to get some hard numbers on performance and it is appreciated if others can replicate my data.
For When should I use Arrow functions in ECMAScript 6? the curl stats I get are:
time_namelookup: 0,031464s
time_connect: 0,041339s
time_appconnect: 0,081889s
time_pretransfer: 0,082169s
time_redirect: 0,000000s
time_starttransfer: 0,186839s
----------
time_total: 0,343926s
So it takes a little bit under 200ms for the first byte to arrive from the server. The remaining 143ms is to transfer all the bytes to me.
After I have run that a couple of times my worst result is
time_namelookup: 0,043707s
time_connect: 0,053465s
time_appconnect: 0,093538s
time_pretransfer: 0,093793s
time_redirect: 0,000000s
time_starttransfer: 0,194928s
----------
time_total: 0,516847s
So the first byte is still arriving under 200ms, the remaining time is network transfer.
I have also tested this Q/A Get MIME type from filename extension because based on this query it is expected it has a large size due to the length of the question and/or answers. In fact that page is 483K. That is roughly 1,5 times more bytes.
Its timing is:
time_namelookup: 0,036470s
time_connect: 0,068119s
time_appconnect: 0,108068s
time_pretransfer: 0,108327s
time_redirect: 0,000000s
time_starttransfer: 0,219468s
----------
time_total: 0,666037s
The time to first byte goes a bit up, just over 200ms now, network transfer time takes up most of the time, as expected. The server processing time doesn't increase even linear with size so that shows there is plenty of headroom.
Given that we are looking at extreme cases and that the server side timings look pretty decent I don't think lazy loading is worth spending time on now, given its complexity and the small gain that is expected. If network latency is indeed troublesome you can fallback to the mobile view of the site. For now that reduces the payload a lot.
You can also visit: http://teststackoverflow.com/ as that collects performance data. Now and then you'll get a page rendered that contains an Ajax call to load that specific site, exactly to obtain client-side performance data. That data is used to make decisions on caching, optimizations, sizing etc.
Worth reading: Stack Overflow: The Architecture - 2016 Edition
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search on a page a bit harder. Is your feature request mainly about reducing bandwidth?