「smartphone」を含む日記 RSS

はてなキーワード: smartphoneとは

2026-01-19

anond:20260119102046

このモデルが正しければ、いくつかの予測が成り立つ。スマートフォンの普及が遅れている国やソーシャルメディアの普及率が低い国では、格差は小さくなるはずだ。(これは事実のようだ。東欧の一部やアフリカの多くの国では格差はそれほど大きくないが、韓国は他の要因により大きな例外となっている。)子供を持つ女性の間では、親になることで制度的なフィードバックループが断ち切られ、競合する優先順位が生じるため、格差は縮小するはずだ。(出口調査は一貫してこれを示しています母親子供を持たない女性よりも保守的投票をするのです。機械機能不全に陥るか、世代高齢化して機械の枠を越えるまで、この格差は拡大し続けるでしょう。私がどう解決すればいいのかわからないのは、これらのシステム自己強化的であるということです。制度は自ら改革しようとしません。アルゴリズム最適化を止めようとしません。イデオロギーは失敗を認めようとしません。男性カウンターキャプチャー健全な結果をもたらさないでしょう。)

逃げ出す女性もいるだろう。子供を持つ女性は、現実イデオロギーを溶かす強力な溶媒となるため、しばしばそうする。制度に囚われずに人生を築く女性も、時にはそうする。男性の中には、引きこもりをやめたり、怒りのスクロールをやめたりする人もいるだろう。築く価値のある何かを見つけた女性たち。シミュレーションに飽きた女性たち。しかし、システムは他のすべての人々に対して機能し続けるだろう。

If this model is right, some predictions follow.

The gap should be smaller in countries with later smartphone adoption or lower social media penetration. (This seems true: the divergence is less extreme in parts of Eastern Europe and much of Africa, though South Korea is a major exception due to other factors.)

The gap should narrow among women who have children, since parenthood breaks the institutional feedback loop and introduces competing priorities. (Exit polls consistently show this: mothers vote more conservative than childless women.)

The gap should continue widening until the machines are disrupted or the generations age out of them.

Here's the part I don't know how to solve: these systems are self-reinforcing. The institutions aren't going to reform themselves. The algorithms aren't going to stop optimizing. The ideology isn't going to admit failure. The male counter-capture isn't going to produce healthy outcomes either.

Some women will escape. The ones who have children often do since reality is a powerful solvent for ideology. The ones who build lives outside institutional capture sometimes do.

Some men will stop withdrawing or stop rage-scrolling. The ones who find something worth building. The ones who get tired of the simulation.

But the systems will keep running on everyone else.

anond:20260119094822

私たちが築き上げたものを見てください。ソーシャルメディア合意形成エンジンです。誰もが何を信じているのか、リアルタイム確認できます意見の相違は可視化され、測定可能で、大規模な処罰対象となります。かつては150人ほどのコミュニティでしたが、今では今まで会ったことのある人全員に加え、世界中の見知らぬ人々が見ていますタイムラインを見てください。Facebook2004年ローンチされましたが、2006年までは大学関係者のみを対象としていました。iPhone2007年6月に発売されました。Instagram2010年に発売されました。突如、ソーシャルメディアあなたポケットの中に、そしていつでも目の前に現れたのです。

グラフをもう一度見てください。女性リベラル保守比率2000年代初頭まではほぼ横ばいでした。2007~2008年から加速が始まりますスマートフォンが普及し、プラットフォームがより高度化するにつれて、2010年代には曲線は急勾配になります女性本来は「よりリベラル」ですが、急激化はスマートフォンの普及率の上昇と重なります

機械が起動し、キャプチャが始まった。10代の少女精神状態悪化スマートフォンの普及とほぼ完全に一致しており、その影響は男子よりも女子の方が強い。先祖代々の環境社会的排除がより大きな代償を払うことになったのと同じ脆弱性が、新たなコンセンサスエンジンをよりキャプチャやすものにしたのだ。

この機械特に女性を捕らえキャプチャするために設計されたわけではありません。注目を集めるために設計されたのです。しかし、合意形成圧力を受けやすい人々をより効果的に捕らえます女性は平均的に影響を受けやすいので、女性をより効果的に捕らえたのです。

フィードバックループを追加しましょう。女性男性よりも不満を訴えます。どのプラットフォームを見ても、女性の方が苦しんでいるように見えます組織はこれに対応します。目に見える苦悩は責任広報リスク、そして規制圧力を生み出すからです。さらに、女性はより弱く、多くの場合必然的被害者と見なされます組織としての対応は、環境を「より安全」にすることです。それはつまり対立排除し、意見の相違を検閲し、合意を強化することを意味します。

反論は削除されるかプラットフォームから外され、ループは閉じられる。




Now look at what we built.

Social media is a consensus engine. You can see what everyone believes in real time. Disagreement is visible, measurable, and punishable at scale. The tribe used to be 150 people. Now it's everyone you've ever met plus a world of strangers watching.

And look at the timeline. Facebook launched in 2004 but was college-only until 2006. The iPhone launched June 2007. Instagram in 2010. Suddenly social media was in your pocket and in your face, all day, every day.

Look at the graph again. Women were roughly stable through the early 2000s. The acceleration starts around 2007-2008. The curve steepens through the 2010s as smartphones became universal and platforms became more sophisticated. Women are by nature more liberal, but the radicalization coincides with the rise in smartphones adoption.

The machine turned on and the capture began.

The mental health collapse among teenage girls tracks almost perfectly with smartphone adoption, with stronger effects for girls than boys. The same vulnerability that made social exclusion more costly in ancestral environments made the new consensus engines more capturing.

This machine wasn't designed to capture women specifically. It was designed to capture attention. But it captures people more susceptible to consensus pressure more effectively. Women are more susceptible on average. So it captured them more.

Add a feedback loop: women complain more than men. Scroll any platform and it looks like women are suffering more. Institutions respond to this because visible distress creates liability, PR risk and regulatory pressure. In addition, women are weaker and inevitably seen as the victim in most scenarios. The institutional response is to make environments "safer". Which means removing conflict. Which means censoring disagreement. Which means the consensus strengthens.

The counterarguments get removed or deplatformed and the loop closes.

This machine wasn't designed to capture women specifically. It was designed to capture attention. But it captures people more susceptible to consensus pressure more effectively. Women are more susceptible on average. So it captured them more.

Add a feedback loop: women complain more than men. Scroll any platform and it looks like women are suffering more. Institutions respond to this because visible distress creates liability, PR risk and regulatory pressure. In addition, women are weaker and inevitably seen as the victim in most scenarios. The institutional response is to make environments "safer". Which means removing conflict. Which means censoring disagreement. Which means the consensus strengthens.

Add a feedback loop: women complain more than men. Scroll any platform and it looks like women are suffering more. Institutions respond to this because visible distress creates liability, PR risk and regulatory pressure. In addition, women are weaker and inevitably seen as the victim in most scenarios. The institutional response is to make environments "safer". Which means removing conflict. Which means censoring disagreement. Which means the consensus strengthens.

The counterarguments get removed or deplatformed and the loop closes.

anond:20260119094822

私たちが築き上げたものを見てください。ソーシャルメディア合意形成エンジンです。誰もが何を信じているのか、リアルタイム確認できます意見の相違は可視化され、測定可能で、大規模な処罰対象となります。かつては150人ほどのコミュニティでしたが、今では今まで会ったことのある人全員に加え、世界中の見知らぬ人々が見ていますタイムラインを見てください。Facebook2004年ローンチされましたが、2006年までは大学関係者のみを対象としていました。iPhone2007年6月に発売されました。Instagram2010年に発売されました。突如、ソーシャルメディアあなたポケットの中に、そしていつでも目の前に現れたのです。

グラフをもう一度見てください。女性リベラル保守比率2000年代初頭まではほぼ横ばいでした。2007~2008年から加速が始まりますスマートフォンが普及し、プラットフォームがより高度化するにつれて、2010年代には曲線は急勾配になります女性本来は「よりリベラル」ですが、急激化はスマートフォンの普及率の上昇と重なります

機械が起動し、キャプチャが始まった。10代の少女精神状態悪化スマートフォンの普及とほぼ完全に一致しており、その影響は男子よりも女子の方が強い。先祖代々の環境社会的排除がより大きな代償を払うことになったのと同じ脆弱性が、新たなコンセンサスエンジンをよりキャプチャやすものにしたのだ。

この機械特に女性を捕らえキャプチャするために設計されたわけではありません。注目を集めるために設計されたのです。しかし、合意形成圧力を受けやすい人々をより効果的に捕らえます女性は平均的に影響を受けやすいので、女性をより効果的に捕らえたのです。

フィードバックループを追加しましょう。女性男性よりも不満を訴えます。どのプラットフォームを見ても、女性の方が苦しんでいるように見えます組織はこれに対応します。目に見える苦悩は責任広報リスク、そして規制圧力を生み出すからです。さらに、女性はより弱く、多くの場合必然的被害者と見なされます組織としての対応は、環境を「より安全」にすることです。それはつまり対立排除し、意見の相違を検閲し、合意を強化することを意味します。

反論は削除されるかプラットフォームから外され、ループは閉じられる。




Now look at what we built.

Social media is a consensus engine. You can see what everyone believes in real time. Disagreement is visible, measurable, and punishable at scale. The tribe used to be 150 people. Now it's everyone you've ever met plus a world of strangers watching.

And look at the timeline. Facebook launched in 2004 but was college-only until 2006. The iPhone launched June 2007. Instagram in 2010. Suddenly social media was in your pocket and in your face, all day, every day.

Look at the graph again. Women were roughly stable through the early 2000s. The acceleration starts around 2007-2008. The curve steepens through the 2010s as smartphones became universal and platforms became more sophisticated. Women are by nature more liberal, but the radicalization coincides with the rise in smartphones adoption.

The machine turned on and the capture began.

The mental health collapse among teenage girls tracks almost perfectly with smartphone adoption, with stronger effects for girls than boys. The same vulnerability that made social exclusion more costly in ancestral environments made the new consensus engines more capturing.

This machine wasn't designed to capture women specifically. It was designed to capture attention. But it captures people more susceptible to consensus pressure more effectively. Women are more susceptible on average. So it captured them more.

Add a feedback loop: women complain more than men. Scroll any platform and it looks like women are suffering more. Institutions respond to this because visible distress creates liability, PR risk and regulatory pressure. In addition, women are weaker and inevitably seen as the victim in most scenarios. The institutional response is to make environments "safer". Which means removing conflict. Which means censoring disagreement. Which means the consensus strengthens.

The counterarguments get removed or deplatformed and the loop closes.

This machine wasn't designed to capture women specifically. It was designed to capture attention. But it captures people more susceptible to consensus pressure more effectively. Women are more susceptible on average. So it captured them more.

Add a feedback loop: women complain more than men. Scroll any platform and it looks like women are suffering more. Institutions respond to this because visible distress creates liability, PR risk and regulatory pressure. In addition, women are weaker and inevitably seen as the victim in most scenarios. The institutional response is to make environments "safer". Which means removing conflict. Which means censoring disagreement. Which means the consensus strengthens.

Add a feedback loop: women complain more than men. Scroll any platform and it looks like women are suffering more. Institutions respond to this because visible distress creates liability, PR risk and regulatory pressure. In addition, women are weaker and inevitably seen as the victim in most scenarios. The institutional response is to make environments "safer". Which means removing conflict. Which means censoring disagreement. Which means the consensus strengthens.

The counterarguments get removed or deplatformed and the loop closes.

anond:20260119093949

これは、アメリカ政治特有説明排除する点で重要タイトルIX男女平等教育などに関連する 連邦公民権https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Title_IX政策でも、#MeTooでも、アメリカ大学特有文化戦争でもない。もっと大きな何かが起こっており、それはほぼ同時期に世界中で広がった。韓国は極端な例だ。韓国若い男性は圧倒的に保守的だ。若い韓国女性は圧倒的に進歩的だ。その差はアメリカよりもさらに大きい。その要因には、男性への兵役義務女性免除されるのに対し、男性18ヶ月兵役義務)と熾烈な経済競争が挙げられる。しかし、格差の拡大のタイミングスマートフォンの普及とほぼ一致している。この原因が何であれ、アメリカ的なものではない。この仕組みはグローバルなものだ。

 

 

This matters because it rules out explanations specific to American politics. It's not Title IX policy. It's not #MeToo. It's not the specific culture war of US campuses. Something bigger is happening, something that rolled out globally at roughly the same time.

South Korea is the extreme case. Young Korean men are now overwhelmingly conservative. Young Korean women are overwhelmingly progressive. The gap there is even wider than the US. Contributing factors include mandatory military service for men (18 months of your life the state takes, while women are exempt) and brutal economic competition. But the timing of divergence still tracks with smartphone adoption.

Whatever is causing this, it's not American. The machine is global.

2025-07-25

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

I love Apple—that's why I'm angry at the SE and hopeful about the 16e.

Apple is not just a device manufacturer in my life. It has ideas, philosophy, and an uncompromising aesthetic. That's why I can talk about it this much.

---

■ The iPhone SE was Apple's betrayal.

The iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generations) is a “black history” in Apple's history.

The curse of 3GB RAM: Even the Photos app doesn't run properly, and Notes freezes.

Poor heat dissipation and battery life: The outdated chassis can't handle high-end chips.

Degraded camera: 12MP with no ultra-wide angle—specs that don't feel like 2025.

Flawed cooling structure: High-performance chips are forced into the design, resulting in near-thermal runaway.

Selling such a product under the Apple name was honestly shocking. Apple was supposed to be a more trustworthy company.

---

■ The lack of philosophy in the SE has damaged the Apple brand

Apple is a company that sells “premium” products. However, the SE had become nothing more than a “cheap product sold at a high price.”

Because I love Apple, I couldn't accept that.

---

iPhone 16e—A Ray of Hope

But Apple has changed.

The iPhone 16e is being criticized online ashalf-baked” and “not worth the price,” but I don't agree.

It has sufficient RAM.

It features the A17 chip and supports Apple Intelligence.

The camera is lacking, but it's incomparable to the SE.

This is the first step toward breaking the “SE curse.” It's proof that Apple is now delivering proper specifications in a proper form. Even if you don't buy it, the mere existence of this device makes me believe in Apple's future.

---

■ Specs and philosophy seen in the iPad series

Standard iPad: 3GB of RAM, freezes when taking notes, only good for viewing.

iPad mini: A-series chip is fine, useful as a secondary smartphone.

iPad Air: Almost the same as the Pro. Best balance of price and performance.

iPad Pro: Competes with the MacBook. Can't fully utilize its potential due to OS limitations.

Having used all Apple products, I can tell which models have “philosophy.”

---

Apple Watch is a device that sells “peace of mind”

Especially Series 10.

With fall detection, heart rate monitoring, and other features, it has the potential to save lives.

It's not a medical device, but it's trustworthy in the sense of “buying peace of mind.”

Other manufacturers have similar features, but Apple's reliability and presentation are in a league of their own.

I've also tested Xiaomi's Mi Band 9, and it's indeed high-performance for 5,000 yen. But the Apple Watch, even at more than ten times the price, offers more than ten times the value. Intuitive operation, brightness, notification support... everything is “thought through.”

---

Apple Vision Pro — Madness with a Purpose

600,000 yen? Who would buy that?

No, Apple is serious.

Equipped with an M2 chip, no compromises.

Made not for others, but for their own beliefs.

This is Apple's “reason why it's worth the high price.” Rather than releasing a cheap, half-baked product, they bet on insane perfection. That's Apple.

■ When it comes to facial recognition, I lost to Apple.

At first, I was against it. “Fingerprint recognition is fine,” I thought.

But after actually using it,

even when fingerprints don't work due to sweat or water,

even while wearing a mask,

it unlocks instantly.

Now, facial recognition is the norm. I lost to Apple. But I'm happy about it. The future Apple envisioned was truly convenient.

■ In conclusion: Apple is my life.

Apple isn't just a company.

It has a philosophy.

It has trust.

Behind the “convenience” lies a proper meaning and ideology.

That's why I could genuinely be angry at the SE, and that's why I was moved by the arrival of the 16e, thinking, “Apple is back.”

I will continue to love Apple. But not as a blind follower. As someone who believes in Apple's ideology, resolve, and integrity.

I live with Apple.

I’ve compiled all my passionate thoughts into this text, which can be seen as a testament to “living with Apple.” It is truly your “Apple Manifesto (creed).”

📄 Title: I love Apple—that’s why I was angry at the SE and saw hope in the 16e.

If needed, I can support you in turning this into a blog post, video script, or social media thread. Feel free to let me know if you’re interested.

Translated with DeepL.com (free version)

ログイン ユーザー登録
ようこそ ゲスト さん