A List of Free Public CDNs for Web Developers
Website speed is crucial for developing the best user experience possible, because, well, no one likes to wait for web pages to load.
One of the simplest ways for improving the performance of a site is by serving page dependencies like JavaScript libraries and CSS frameworks via a public content delivery network (CDN).
A public CDN is a web service that hosts and serves open source projects used for web development (e.g. jQuery, AngularJS, and Bootstrap). Public CDNs allow websites to use their services for free.
Here are the best public CDNs for web development.
jsDelivr
With over 1,000 open source projects hosted on jsDelivr, it’s currently one of your most comprehensive options for free CDNs. jsDelivr relies on a couple of reputable CDN companies — CloudFront as the primary and MaxCDN as the failover — which ensures great service uptimes. jsDelivr is an open source project.
cdnjs
Another extensive public CDN is cdnjs, which has a little over 900 open source resources conveniently listed all in one page. Tip: See their list of plugins and extensions on GitHub to find useful tools related to the service — for example, there’s CDNJS for WordPress, a plugin for quickly implementing cdnjs-hosted projects on WP sites.
Microsoft Ajax Content Delivery Network
Many people outside of the ASP.NET development community don’t know that Microsoft has a public CDN. Among the open source projects on Microsoft’s Ajax CDN are jQuery, Bootstrap, and Respond.js. Compared to your other choices, Microsoft’s list of available open source projects is sparse, but what you do get is the peace of mind that comes from using a service maintained by a well-established, 39-year-old tech company.
Open Source Software CDN (OSSCDN)
This CDN is an open source project by MaxCDN and is powered by jsDelivr. The difference between OSSCDN and jsDelivr, besides the user interface and project ownership, is that MaxCDN, which is jsDelivr’s failover/backup CDN, is the primary content delivery network.
Google Hosted Libraries
Google is a leader in the realm of website speed and performance. But not to be a company satisfied by just talking the talk; they also walk the walk by maintaining a public CDN that hosts popular JavaScript frameworks such as AngularJS, jQuery, and even older ones like MooTools and Prototype.
Project-specific CDNs
Some open source projects have their own free CDNs. Here’s a couple of popular ones.
Bootstrap CDN
This public CDN can be used to serve Bootstrap core, as well as Font Awesome and Bootswatch.
jQuery CDN
The jQuery project has its own free CDN hosting for serving various versions of jQuery and its related projects (jQuery UI, Qunit, etc.).
Why Use a Public CDN?
Performance
Content delivery networks, in general, can reduce your page response times because they are able serve resources from multiple geographic locations, lowering the distance the data has to travel to reach the user.
Compared to multipurpose web servers, like the ones used by shared web hosting providers, CDNs also have optimized backend technology specifically for sending out static page resources such as images, JS files, stylesheets, and so forth.
Ease of use and maintenance
It’s a hassle to upload and update open source libraries on your server. With free public CDNs, all you have to do is reference your dependencies and they will just work.
And, if you were away on vacation or aren’t keeping up with project updates as much as you should, you have little to worry about because the public CDN will likely update the files they’re serving.
Reliability
The free public CDNs in this list are backed by major tech companies, giving you a bit of assurance with regards to their trustworthiness and service performance.
Higher cached probability
Because public CDNs are used by many websites, there’s a bigger chance that the user coming to your site already has a resource stored in their browser, further improving your page response times.
It’s free
In my definition of what a “public CDN” is, the service should have no fees and should be accessible by anyone, just like Gmail or Dropbox.
Related Content
- Why Website Speed is Important
- 8 Excellent WordPress Caching Plugins to Speed Up Your Site
- 10 Tips for Optimizing Your Website’s Speed
- 13 Reasons Why You Should Pay Attention to Mobile Web Performance
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