^^ should be a required outcome of anything man made. Would save everyone a lot of pain, cause much panic amongst companies lol....snip
It reminds me of an old Honda ad. "Isn't it nice when things just work?"
Me on the opposite end as far as which mobile phone I started with - it was always iPhone, BUT itās for the very reasons you mentioned, which can be summed up to be:Oh my, don't start that. You'll get thirty-five pages of personal opinions, at the end of which you'll still have no clue.
I've always liked Apple products, but steered clear of the iPhone because I felt it was too restricted for my taste. As an experienced IT guy I couldn't stand the idea of not being the master of my own device. Which is why I used to be a Samsung user. I used to laugh at iPhones for not being able to do simple, fundamental things which the Samsung did so well and easily. Until one day I realized that the iPhone wasn't necessarily more stupid, but just different, and that if I stop trying to use an iPhone like a Samsung, but rather use it as it was designed to be used, I will never miss any of the Samsung's features.
So, now I'm a happy iPhone user. What I love most about it isn't just the phone itself, but the entire ecosystem, the sublime way in which all the devices in my household integrate in one single, perfectly smooth and seamless cloud, while at the same time keeping my kids' phones safe. Every device just works. No need for regular maintenance, no need for anti-virus software, everything works after two years exactly as well and as fast as it did on the first day.
It reminds me of an old Honda ad. "Isn't it nice when things just work?"