Sorry, unfortunately I have to contradict you again. The fetchpriority property is not a replacement for early hint, especially since this property does not influence the loading, but as mentioned, influences the display behavior. If I mentioned this property, only because I still believe that your interpretation of the Waterfall is wrong. The Waterfall shows you the request of a source, but this request is not superfluous by the Early Hint. What you see in the Waterfalls is the actual request with the status code 200. I currently assume that the Early Hints will not be displayed in the event of a waterfall, especially since they are shown in parallel to the Request of the Main Document should. At least that's what the logic wants to tell me. In order to be able to analyze the loading of sources at network level, a browser function is not sufficient. For this you need professional software such as "Wireshark".
Unfortunately, I can't get anything out of your tips, especially since your tips have nothing to have with the HTTP protocol used. My page is faster than 100 million others. If a page is loaded faster than it takes time to let the mouse button loose, the maximum is achieved. Every further improvement takes place in the microsecond area.
Unfortunately, I can't get anything out of your tips, especially since your tips have nothing to have with the HTTP protocol used. My page is faster than 100 million others. If a page is loaded faster than it takes time to let the mouse button loose, the maximum is achieved. Every further improvement takes place in the microsecond area.