Getting Started with HTTP/2: Part 1 ============================================================ ![](https://static.viget.com/_284x284_crop_center-center/http2-pizza.png?mtime=20160822160641) Using pizza to show how HTTP/2 beats HTTP/1.1 when your orders get too big. _HTTP/2 has some really amazing changes to the way web sites and applications can be built. A year and a half after becoming published, almost [10% of websites support HTTP/2][4]. It has definitely had notable adoption, but the conversation should be pushed further for front-end developers on best practices when using HTTP/2\. This is a multi-part blog post to give front-end developers a guide on how to switch over to HTTP/2. _ _This post covers how HTTP/2 is an improvement to HTTP/1.1 and what that may look like to front-end developers._ ### Remind me what HTTP is again... Hyper Text Transfer Protocol, better known as HTTP, is the protocol that determines how content is transferred over the web. When HTTP/1.1 was standardized in 1999, the web was a very different place than it is today. Tables were king. Styles were usually done inline at the element level, or if the webmaster was more refined, they would put it in a `