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👏Welcome back, readers! Let us continue from the previous topic about Content delivery networks (CDN).
You may have this question at the back of your mind 💭, “who uses a CDN?”. Almost everybody. CDNs already provide more than 50% of all traffic today. These figures are steadily rising with each passing year. The fact is that if any portion of your organization is online, there are few reasons not to employ a CDN, especially since many of them provide their services for free.
CDNs, even as a free service, are not for everyone. Specifically, if you are running a purely localized website, with the great majority of your visitors being in the same region as your hosting, a CDN will provide minimal advantage. In this case, implementing a CDN might actually degrade the speed of your website by adding another unnecessary connection point between the user and an existing nearby server.
➕Benefits of using a CDN
Now that we briefly understand who uses CDN, why do they use it in the first place?
In the previous article, we mentioned CDN helps to improve website loading speed. Faster loading speed is achieved by reducing load times by up to 50%. This is accomplished by lowering file sizes, shortening the distance between where material is stored and where it is directed, and optimizing servers to react to user requests more quickly.
Let us explore 👀 other benefits of using a CDN below:
Cost savings
The major method CDNs save money is by reducing the number of exchanges to and from the origin server. Much of the website’s content is cached via CDNs, which means less work for the origin server because it does not have to re-deliver the same information frequently.
Protection against cyber-attacks
When it comes to fighting against denial-of-service (DoS) and distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks, CDNs are unrivaled. They can keep websites operational even when attacked since they can absorb massive amounts of garbage network traffic.
Load balancing
Because reverse proxy servers act as a bridge between users and the origin server of your application, they may select where to route individual HTTP connections. This implies that for applications that employ numerous backend servers, the reverse proxy may properly divide the load, increasing overall user experience and assisting in ensuring high availability.
Increased reliability
Nothing, even the internet, is perfect. Servers fail, networks get overcrowded, and connections are interrupted as a result. CDNs allow web applications to remain operational even during these turbulent times. They do this by balancing network traffic loads so that no single server is overburdened.
Give yourself a pat on the back if you made it this far! In the next CDN article, we will be discussing the current state of CDN and what will be the future state of CDN. Stay tuned for decentralized storage knowledge 😃. RRMine Global mining away!

About RRMine Global
RRMine Global, the world’s leading Filecoin service provider offering global cloud-computing asset management, is a storage service platform under Hong Kong SuperB Grace Limited (Youcai Co., Ltd.).
The RRMine Global brand was formerly known as RRMine, aims to continuously develop and expand globally to ensure people can access standardized Hashrate services in more countries and regions. RRMine Global is constructing a decentralized global Hashrate infrastructure to achieve the free movement of Hashrate assets and make everyone comfortable holding Hashrate assets. The current focus of RRMine Global is to provide users with secure and transparent decentralized storage services. RRMine Global is strategically located in more than ten countries and regions worldwide, and the number of network nodes exceeds 100. Moreover, it has formed a large-scale storage service network coverage and promotes globalization too.
Visit us 🔽 for more updates.

👏Welcome back, readers! Let us continue from the previous topic about Content delivery networks (CDN).
You may have this question at the back of your mind 💭, “who uses a CDN?”. Almost everybody. CDNs already provide more than 50% of all traffic today. These figures are steadily rising with each passing year. The fact is that if any portion of your organization is online, there are few reasons not to employ a CDN, especially since many of them provide their services for free.
CDNs, even as a free service, are not for everyone. Specifically, if you are running a purely localized website, with the great majority of your visitors being in the same region as your hosting, a CDN will provide minimal advantage. In this case, implementing a CDN might actually degrade the speed of your website by adding another unnecessary connection point between the user and an existing nearby server.
➕Benefits of using a CDN
Now that we briefly understand who uses CDN, why do they use it in the first place?
In the previous article, we mentioned CDN helps to improve website loading speed. Faster loading speed is achieved by reducing load times by up to 50%. This is accomplished by lowering file sizes, shortening the distance between where material is stored and where it is directed, and optimizing servers to react to user requests more quickly.
Let us explore 👀 other benefits of using a CDN below:
Cost savings
The major method CDNs save money is by reducing the number of exchanges to and from the origin server. Much of the website’s content is cached via CDNs, which means less work for the origin server because it does not have to re-deliver the same information frequently.
Protection against cyber-attacks
When it comes to fighting against denial-of-service (DoS) and distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks, CDNs are unrivaled. They can keep websites operational even when attacked since they can absorb massive amounts of garbage network traffic.
Load balancing
Because reverse proxy servers act as a bridge between users and the origin server of your application, they may select where to route individual HTTP connections. This implies that for applications that employ numerous backend servers, the reverse proxy may properly divide the load, increasing overall user experience and assisting in ensuring high availability.
Increased reliability
Nothing, even the internet, is perfect. Servers fail, networks get overcrowded, and connections are interrupted as a result. CDNs allow web applications to remain operational even during these turbulent times. They do this by balancing network traffic loads so that no single server is overburdened.
Give yourself a pat on the back if you made it this far! In the next CDN article, we will be discussing the current state of CDN and what will be the future state of CDN. Stay tuned for decentralized storage knowledge 😃. RRMine Global mining away!

About RRMine Global
RRMine Global, the world’s leading Filecoin service provider offering global cloud-computing asset management, is a storage service platform under Hong Kong SuperB Grace Limited (Youcai Co., Ltd.).
The RRMine Global brand was formerly known as RRMine, aims to continuously develop and expand globally to ensure people can access standardized Hashrate services in more countries and regions. RRMine Global is constructing a decentralized global Hashrate infrastructure to achieve the free movement of Hashrate assets and make everyone comfortable holding Hashrate assets. The current focus of RRMine Global is to provide users with secure and transparent decentralized storage services. RRMine Global is strategically located in more than ten countries and regions worldwide, and the number of network nodes exceeds 100. Moreover, it has formed a large-scale storage service network coverage and promotes globalization too.
Visit us 🔽 for more updates.
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