The advent of the mobile Web and the increasing demand for personalized contents arise the need for computationally expensive services, such as dynamic generation and on-thefly adaptation of contents. Providing these services exacerbates the performance issues that have to be addressed by the underlying Web architecture. When performance issues are addressed through geographically distributed Web systems with a large number of nodes located on the network edge, the dispatching mechanism that distributes requests among the system nodes becomes a critical element. In this paper, we investigate how the granularity of request dispatching may affect the performance of a distributed Web system for personalized contents. Through a real prototype, we compare dispatching mechanisms operating at various levels of granularity for different workload and network scenarios. We demonstrate that the choice of the best granularity for request dispatching strongly depends on the characteristics of the...