Files
Website-2026/blog/10072026.text
T
2026-07-10 17:45:21 +02:00

79 lines
5.0 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters
This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.
2026-07-10 16:33
De-Apple-ing my life.
I have been a lifelong Apple user, mainly when it comes to their phones, smart speakers, headphones, watches, and services.
My last Apple devices were:
iPhone 15
Apple Watch
2 HomePod Minis
AirPods Pro 2
Alongside those, I used services like Apple Music and Apple TV.
For a long time, I was satisfied with Apple products. Everything felt great except computing, where around 20242025 I started feeling like the operating systems and applications had become harder to use and more buggy than they were in the past.
I think this comes from Apple's design philosophy of hiding almost everything while trying to make everything simple. However, I also think part of it comes from my own needs changing as I have wanted more advanced features from my devices over the years. That said, I also feel like product quality has declined.
I especially grew to dislike Apple HomeKit, Siri, and how unreliable they were in my own home. I would try to connect to my HomePods through AirPlay, and it would sometimes take ages to load - if it worked at all. Other times, it wouldn't even use native playback, meaning I would just end up using my phone instead.
My AirPods were also constantly giving me issues.
My first pair of base AirPods (1st generation):
The left AirPod stopped charging, so I got them replaced.
My first pair of AirPods Pro (1st generation):
The right AirPod started having "rattle gate" issues, where certain frequencies would cause it to rattle. I got both earbuds replaced, even though only one had the issue.
The replacements:
The right AirPod developed the same rattle issue again, but this time it also had noticeably lower volume than the other earbud. I got them replaced again.
The replacements x2:
The left AirPod started having rattle issues this time. However, Apple told me I would need to buy a new pair, so I did - I "upgraded" to the AirPods Pro 2.
AirPods Pro 2:
The right earbud developed rattle issues and reduced volume. I thought they would have fixed these problems by now, but apparently not. I got it replaced.
AirPods Pro 2 replacements:
The left earbud's ANC stopped working, so I ended up having the case and both earbuds replaced.
These last AirPods have finally lasted, but honestly, I am just fed up with them.
If I was only having problems with Apple's hardware, they could probably get away with it. However, their operating systems have also noticeably declined.
Not only do they feel less stable, but features also feel less polished than they used to. Crashes, connectivity issues, lack of lower-level system settings, and performance problems have all become more noticeable.
Apple Watches also started feeling stagnant. It felt like they were mostly just refreshing the same product rather than meaningfully improving it. On top of that, I couldn't always rely on mine. Notifications were inconsistent, and there were times where my watch simply wouldn't notify me about calls, texts, or other alerts.
So I swapped.
I decided to ditch my old Apple devices and fully commit to de-Applefying my setup.
My new devices are:
Phone: Samsung Galaxy S26
Watch: Samsung Galaxy Watch8 Classic
On-the-go headphones: Samsung Galaxy Buds4 Pro
My HomePods were replaced with:
Sonos Era 300 in the kitchen
2 Sonos Era 300s paired with a Sub 4 in the living room
Sonos Era 100 in the bedroom
Sonos Roam 2 in the office, which I can also take into the bathroom or elsewhere
Although I was happy with Apple's services, I decided to try Tidal. I ended up liking it more, and I also found the music sounded better compared to Apple Music, despite both offering lossless audio. I also simply wasn't using Apple TV.
My initial impressions:
The Sonos speakers are obviously a massive upgrade over my HomePod Minis, so there isn't much to say there. What I really appreciate, though, is how "dumb" and local the Sonos Assistant feels. It does what I want without trying to be overly complicated.
My phone has also been better than I expected. There was definitely a learning curve switching to Android as my main operating system, but beyond that, the transition was surprisingly painless. I actually prefer Android now.
It is far more configurable and has features that Apple devices still don't offer, such as split-screen multitasking.
The new on-the-go headphones completely blow my old ones out of the water. With UHQ enabled, Loudness Equalisation disabled, and Spatial Audio turned off, they sound extremely impressive thanks to their dual-driver design.
They especially stand out in songs that are more complex, with lots of separation between highs and mids. I also find they reproduce those target frequencies more accurately. In some ways, they remind me more of my Yamaha HPH-MT8s compared to my AirPods.
But this impression has only been based on around 12 months of use, as this change is still very recent and my experience is still fairly surface-level.
I'll have to make an update in the future if my opinions change.
If you read this far, thank you. See you soon.
Enjoy self-hosting!