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CloudFlare offers HTTP/2
Today CloudFlare is introducing HTTP/2 support for all customers using SSL/TLS connections, while still supporting SPDY. There is no need to make a decision between SPDY or HTTP/2. Both are automatically there for you and your customers.
The main focus of both SPDY and HTTP/2 is on performance, especially latency as perceived by the end-user while using a browser, with a secondary focus on network and server resource usage. One main benefit is the ability to use a single TCP connection from browsers to a website, or in the case of CloudFlare, a reverse proxy. As such, CloudFlare is in the perfect position to provide the benefits of HTTP/2 to all CloudFlare users by accelerating the web surfing experience between clients’ browsers and CloudFlare, without the need to change anything on the origin server.
Comments
I don't know my feelings about http2. I tried it on nginx and I've got a file download prompt sometimes on non-encrypted http2 connection instead of the html webpage displayed.
made me install https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/http2-and-spdy-indicator/mpbpobfflnpcgagjijhmgnchggcjblin?utm_source=chrome-app-launcher-info-dialog after reading that on my email. o_O
HTTP/2 sucks. http://tech.slashdot.org/story/14/05/26/2316248/phk-http-20-should-be-scrapped
http://tech.slashdot.org/story/15/01/09/0118226/http2---the-ietf-is-phoning-it-in
CloudFlare is just a bunch of marketing now.
HTTP/2 is completely awful at least because it will work only with HTTPS on most browsers.
I have no idea why CF didn't implement standard HTTP as well.
because web browsers are only supporting HTTP/2 via HTTPS
That in itself doesn't make much sense.
https://http2.github.io/faq/#does-http2-require-encryption
There is no excuse not to use HTTPS today other than one's utter ignorance and disregard for people's personal information. Website operators who do not take basic measures to protect the privacy and identity of their users should be jailed.
Not sure how much personal info is exchanged when large amounts of traffic are read-only to visitors.
Still, https sucks with its pricing. And yes, I've got a domain with https.
So should people who flame on the Internet.