@Antique
The kicklayout file does not contain so much things in it. Of course you'll a few seconds at cold boot. But at what price? You are just deactivating some system features, and obviously a few weeks, months away when you'll hook a new piece of hardware to your machine, you'll complain it does not works as others.
Moreover are you cold booting so much that a 5 seconds gain worth the trouble and hassle?
@vox
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b) Saving system resources
You'll not save so much system resources because if the specific hardware is not detected by the kickstart module then it shuts down (and free its memory)
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c) Not loading unnecessary drivers anyway and introducing kind of driver managment
See above answer. Adds to it that drivers in kicklayout have been carefully selected to ease booting and cut warm boot time as much as possible (anything loaded in kickstart at cold boot obviously does not have to be loaded from disk at each warm reboot). And finally there is already a driver management: if the dedicated hardware is not found the driver shutdown...