In my other life as marketing director for Hosting Nation, I have the luxury of working in a development environment before placing anything live. It’s a nice benefit. We can test design, applications and software and pretty much everything.
If you were a fly on the wall, you would hear three words at least once a day. From me to a co-worker, from them to me or from me to a client. It’s almost become a bit of a joke, something we utter every time something doesn’t look right.
“Clear your Cache”.
See, browsers like Firefox and Internet Explorer save copies of some of your web files. Stuff like your stylesheets, graphics and images and processes that run in the background. They do it so that they can load pages more quickly the second time around. The pitfall is that when you make changes and upload them to the live server, if you don’t clear your cache before viewing the content you often won’t see the differences. I’ll tell you now, it can be extremely frustrating. I’ve seen it result in the hapless mashing of F5 like a rookie gamer playing Street Fighter against the world champ. I’ve seen it cause grown adults to act like the angry german kid (warning – explicit content – NSFW) and it takes 2 minutes to fix.
Here’s how to do it. (source, wikihow)
WikiHow shows you methods for several older versions of IE and Firefox. If you use Safari, Opera or Chrome use your favourite search engine to find instructions.
The worst part? We all know better and still forget at least once a day. Maybe writing this post will help.
This entry was written by Sean Enns, posted on June 15, 2009 at 7:28 pm, filed under Content Marketing, Search Engine Optimization and tagged Tips, Web Design. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink.