This is all fair and good. I was just pointing out the beginnings of a trend.
To me, build-time image optimization would’ve been a prerequisite for next/image even launching in the past. Something in the tune of “…and Vercel does all of this for you, automatically, by default when deployed to Vercel”. Instead, we get a build-time error on export.
I agree that the vast majority don’t need a custom server. If I could go without one, I would. Unfortunately I can’t, and this one’s not a criticism. It was clear to me once “Develop. Preview. Ship.” became the tagline that things like Docker support would go away. Fair.
Glad to hear Next.js Live will be open source, and I’m assuming it’ll be easy to deploy given the quality of Vercel’s work. I personally don’t understand the use-case but can see how it adds to Vercel’s value add.
Appreciate the reply! I just wish Vercel looked into immutable database provisioning, continued Docker support, alongside the stellar React work.
To me, build-time image optimization would’ve been a prerequisite for next/image even launching in the past. Something in the tune of “…and Vercel does all of this for you, automatically, by default when deployed to Vercel”. Instead, we get a build-time error on export.
I agree that the vast majority don’t need a custom server. If I could go without one, I would. Unfortunately I can’t, and this one’s not a criticism. It was clear to me once “Develop. Preview. Ship.” became the tagline that things like Docker support would go away. Fair.
Glad to hear Next.js Live will be open source, and I’m assuming it’ll be easy to deploy given the quality of Vercel’s work. I personally don’t understand the use-case but can see how it adds to Vercel’s value add.
Appreciate the reply! I just wish Vercel looked into immutable database provisioning, continued Docker support, alongside the stellar React work.