Winter Storm Watch for NY, NJ, CT: Heavy Snow, Hazardous Travel, Frigid Temps – Fox 5 Forecast

by Emma Walker – News Editor

Okay, I’ve analyzed the provided ⁢text. It ​appears to be a series of <link rel="preload" tags, commonly found in ​HTML code. These tags are used to⁣ tell the browser to⁤ download resources (in this case, ⁣images) in‌ the background, improving page load performance.

Here’s a breakdown of‌ what the data tells us:

* rel="preload": This attribute ⁤indicates that the browser should proactively download⁢ the resource.
* href="...": This attribute contains the⁤ URL of the resource to be downloaded. All the URLs point to ⁣images hosted on ‌ scontent-hel3-1.xx.fbcdn.net,​ which is a Facebook ⁤content delivery ⁣network (CDN).
* as="image": This attribute specifies the‍ type‍ of resource⁢ being preloaded,in this case,an image.
* data-preloader="...": This attribute seems to be specific to Facebook’s internal preloading mechanism. It likely ⁢helps them manage and track the ⁢preloaded resources.
* The URLs themselves: The URLs contain a lot of‍ parameters (stp, _nc_cat, ccb, _nc_sid, _nc_ohc, _nc_oc, _nc_zt, _nc_ht, _nc_gid, oh, ‍ oe).These parameters are used ‌by Facebook for caching, security,⁤ and tracking. The⁤ oe= ⁤parameter likely represents an expiration⁢ time‍ for ​the cached image.
* ⁤ Image Sizes: The‍ stp=dst-jpg_s960x960_tt6 part of the URL indicates that the images ​are JPEG format‍ and are ‍intended‍ to be displayed at a size of ⁤960×960 pixels.

In summary:

This code snippet is ‌part of a​ Facebook page (likely a video page) and is ​designed to preload several images ⁤to make the page load⁣ faster and provide a‌ smoother user experience. The images ​are likely thumbnails or ‍related images for a video.

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