<!doctype html><htmllang=en><head><metacharset=utf-8><metacontent="width=device-width,initial-scale=1"name=viewport><title>The 250kb Club</title><metacontent="An exclusive membership for web pages presenting themselves in no more than 250kb."name=description><metacontent="Norman Köhring"name=author><metacontent="The 250kb Club"name=DC.title><linkhref=https://koehr.inrel=author><linkhref=/favicon.pngrel=icontype=image/x-icon><linkhref=https://250kb.club/rss.xmlrel=alternatetitle=RSStype=application/rss+xml><style>body{
}</style><body><mainid=member><h1class="p-name dated"id=title>matthewstrom.com</h1><pclass="big center">Proud member of the exclusive 250kbclub!<p><timeclass=dt-publishedcontent=2022-03-22datetime=2022-03-22itemprop=datePublishedpubdate> Added: 2022-03-22 </time> | <timeclass=dt-publishedcontent=2022-03-22datetime=2022-03-22itemprop=datePublishedpubdate> Last updated: 2022-03-22 </time><pclass=e-content><arel="noopener nofollow"href=https://matthewstrom.comtarget=_blank>matthewstrom.com</a> is a member of the exclusive 250kb club. The page weighs <strong> only 26kb </strong> and has a content-to-bloat ratio of <strong>9%</strong>.<p>They are now entitled to add one of those shiny badges to your page. But don't forget, even though I tried to make them as small as possibe, a badge will add some kilobytes to your page weight. A code snipped can be found by clicking on the respective badge.<pclass=badges>The badges can either be downloaded and served by yourself or linked directly from 250kb.club. The latter might save a few users some bandwidth if the badge is already cached. On the other hand this gives the 250kb.club server a log entry for <i>every visitor of <strong>your</strong> page</i>. I'm not interested in those logs but you still have to trust my word. So decide for yourself.<details><summary><imgalt="simple badge, dark"src=/simple_badge_dark.png> (1.4kB)</summary><pre><code>