I'm interested to hear from some others devs out there how much you take advantage of "anticipated preloading"?
We have a couple of decent sized, minified sets of JS and CSS files (around 50k each, set up with all the cache bells and whistles on our cdn) on our homepage but then a 123kb minified/cacheable/cdn'd set of JS files and a bit more CSS on the page that the user is inevitably going to go to right after our homepage.
So I've been toying with the preloading by using jQuery's getScript() (with the cache option set) and have been loading the 123kb file on pageload on the mainpage to make the user's transition into the richer area of the site a bit quicker and more pleasant.
Things seem to perform great on my computer but a) that's not everyones setup and b) something just feels a bit funny seeing so much weight in KB (~550kb) on my Firebug Net Console. Granted when I return it's 565kb/568kb cached and only about 2.6s onload..but still..
Thoughts? Words of wisdom? Does this have a big impact on mobile users?
Curious to hear your thoughts, Cheers