accelerated mobile pages

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    Brave's browser can automatically bypass Google's AMP pages

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    04.20.2022

    Brave is putting Google's Accelerate Mobile Pages (AMP) on blast with a new feature called De-AMP.

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    Google brings AMP-powered search to Google Images

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    07.25.2019

    Google wants to make it easier for users to search for content through Google Images. To do so, it's rolling out a new, AMP-powered Swipe to Visit feature. When you select an image, you'll see a preview of the website header at the bottom of the screen. You can keep scrolling through Google Images, or swipe up on the preview to load the AMP (accelerated mobile pages) version of the site.

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    Gmail’s ‘dynamic email’ will be available to everyone July 2nd

    by 
    Amrita Khalid
    Amrita Khalid
    06.10.2019

    You'll soon be able to do a lot more in Gmail -- without ever leaving your inbox. Google will make AMP-powered "dynamic emails" for Gmail available to the general public on July 2nd, following a beta release to paying G Suite customers earlier this year. You've undoubtedly encountered AMP, or "accelerated mobile pages" if you've opened a link on your phone; it's a Google-built protocol that can load web pages using it a lot more quickly. With AMP in Gmail, users perform web-based tasks right in their inbox, such as filling out forms, RSVPing to an event, responding to an edit in Google Docs, or browsing images in a carousel. The feature will only be available for Gmail on the web, with mobile due to come at an unspecified date.

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    Google's fast-loading AMP tech won't hide original web page links

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    04.17.2019

    You might like Google's quick-loading AMP pages, but site owners aren't always thrilled when it frequently buries their web domain. They might be more receptive in the future, though -- Google is rolling out support for a feature that displays the original domain while maintaining that speedy AMP tech. It relies on signed exchanges that let sites trust documents (such as pages and cookies) as if they belonged to a given site's origin, ensuring that you see the actual page address without losing functionality.