Firstly, don't respond to this thread listing things that most people generally agree on; e.g. look at all the soldered Mac Minis, look at the 16 gb iPhones, why doesn't Pages do more stuff. No, I'm here because I feel like the great things going on, at least from my perspective, do not get a fair enough shake. I don't think Apple is perfect, but I feel like if they aren't at a peak right now they certainly are approaching one. There are a ton of things I like about the way my devices work and interact and I'm going to make some notes on that.
- Apple is continuing to introduce things which become an ecosystem wide standard and subsequently get widely copied by competitors. TouchID, 3D Touch, and the new butterfly keyboard. In the past, the lines were not integrated with things like this. Apple is changing that without doing something ridiculous like merging OS's.
- We are not in the early iOS 7 dark ages anymore. 9 is a joy to use for me and I feel it shows confidence and maturity. I can't name for you an iOS release I didn't have issues with but my experience has been that it has continually improved since the "rebirth". I'm doing tasks from app to app to app at the speed of light. Yes, there's more options. We are in the 8th year of popular smart phones. It only takes a time or two to get the hang of something and then you're off. iOS is still EXTREMELY effecient and the reasons to jailbreak shrink more and more each release.
- iCloud is no longer useless, not by a long shot. I love being able to painlessly log in on my Windows 7 work computer - after two-step verification - and mess with my iWork stuff, Drive, get something from iCloud Photos and put it on here. On my iPhone, I love that my photo library, thousands of files in size, sits in the cloud and only picks something out of it when I need it. My Drive app has become extremely useful and the way it interacts with iOS and the apps makes sense. On my Mac, I can manage things in the same way. I also use Maildrop all of the time. iCloud is literally, finally becoming what the idea was meant to be in the first place.
- The Watch is an amazing device, period. It's not a "need". Neither is an iPad. For my situation and things I do, it improves my processes just as much as my iPad did when I needed that in my life. The potential for further integration including Homekit and things like that cannot be overestimated. The one mistake I could point out is the way they have branded it as a "watch"... - then again, the phone is only one component of what makes up an iPhone.
- It's classy period to push the same line of colors system-wide. Space grey, silver, gold, rose gold. They all look great, and again, the integration, this is an extremely Apple thing to do. My Watch is a little darker than my 6S at this point in the game, but they still look fantastic together.
- Speaking of the 6S, I thought the 5S was the pinnacle of iPhone engineering..... the 6S gives it a run for it's money. It feels amazing in the hand, the mounting of the screen is great, the weight is nice - it absolutely feels premium and 2015. I would NEVER go back.
- Security, security, security, and more security. The App store is doubling down on it and if your ID itself is not rock solid safe there really is nobody else to blame.
- Apple as a company has improved. Employees get stock options, their manufacturing environmental footprint is gradually shrinking.
The state of things ECOSYSTEM wide, like it or not, is at a high.
But no, the company has not cured cancer or come out with a backlit keyboard. Do people honestly just want an iPhone 3GS and 2008 iMac again?
Just some thoughts...
- Apple is continuing to introduce things which become an ecosystem wide standard and subsequently get widely copied by competitors. TouchID, 3D Touch, and the new butterfly keyboard. In the past, the lines were not integrated with things like this. Apple is changing that without doing something ridiculous like merging OS's.
- We are not in the early iOS 7 dark ages anymore. 9 is a joy to use for me and I feel it shows confidence and maturity. I can't name for you an iOS release I didn't have issues with but my experience has been that it has continually improved since the "rebirth". I'm doing tasks from app to app to app at the speed of light. Yes, there's more options. We are in the 8th year of popular smart phones. It only takes a time or two to get the hang of something and then you're off. iOS is still EXTREMELY effecient and the reasons to jailbreak shrink more and more each release.
- iCloud is no longer useless, not by a long shot. I love being able to painlessly log in on my Windows 7 work computer - after two-step verification - and mess with my iWork stuff, Drive, get something from iCloud Photos and put it on here. On my iPhone, I love that my photo library, thousands of files in size, sits in the cloud and only picks something out of it when I need it. My Drive app has become extremely useful and the way it interacts with iOS and the apps makes sense. On my Mac, I can manage things in the same way. I also use Maildrop all of the time. iCloud is literally, finally becoming what the idea was meant to be in the first place.
- The Watch is an amazing device, period. It's not a "need". Neither is an iPad. For my situation and things I do, it improves my processes just as much as my iPad did when I needed that in my life. The potential for further integration including Homekit and things like that cannot be overestimated. The one mistake I could point out is the way they have branded it as a "watch"... - then again, the phone is only one component of what makes up an iPhone.
- It's classy period to push the same line of colors system-wide. Space grey, silver, gold, rose gold. They all look great, and again, the integration, this is an extremely Apple thing to do. My Watch is a little darker than my 6S at this point in the game, but they still look fantastic together.
- Speaking of the 6S, I thought the 5S was the pinnacle of iPhone engineering..... the 6S gives it a run for it's money. It feels amazing in the hand, the mounting of the screen is great, the weight is nice - it absolutely feels premium and 2015. I would NEVER go back.
- Security, security, security, and more security. The App store is doubling down on it and if your ID itself is not rock solid safe there really is nobody else to blame.
- Apple as a company has improved. Employees get stock options, their manufacturing environmental footprint is gradually shrinking.
The state of things ECOSYSTEM wide, like it or not, is at a high.
But no, the company has not cured cancer or come out with a backlit keyboard. Do people honestly just want an iPhone 3GS and 2008 iMac again?
Just some thoughts...