> Please, as a user, I implore you to look into native targets. It's not as hard as it seems anymore. Some thins really do need Jlink.
You are not my target. It's enterprise software - I'm given a Windows Server VM and the rights to install our software, that's it. Most IT admins don't even want to bother to install or let alone support JRE updates. We got tons of customers and this experience is uniform.
> It's great for desktop development
For desktop I'd totally use Jlink. Really the only possible place GraalVM's NI seems like a plausible fit to me is CLI tools and Java Microservices, where fast start and low memory consumption actually make sense. edit: But honestly at this point for Microservices I'd probably go with Go.
You are not my target. It's enterprise software - I'm given a Windows Server VM and the rights to install our software, that's it. Most IT admins don't even want to bother to install or let alone support JRE updates. We got tons of customers and this experience is uniform.
> It's great for desktop development
For desktop I'd totally use Jlink. Really the only possible place GraalVM's NI seems like a plausible fit to me is CLI tools and Java Microservices, where fast start and low memory consumption actually make sense. edit: But honestly at this point for Microservices I'd probably go with Go.