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Comments
For some. But keep in mind that our needs as ultra-power-users are not the needs of the average user. We are the 1%. Most people appreciate iOS's way of doing stuff automatically with minimal user interaction required (in fact, I do too on my devices that are not earmarked for one very specific purpose).
I understand where you're coming from (and I recognize the irritation), but I also see Apple's rationale and I'm just saying they're not doing it with evil intentions.
I'm with @MonzoPro on this one. Where does it end? How about Apple being able to force switch on your internet to update? Imagine that during a gig. Where is the line drawn?
It sets a precedent. One I believe to be quite dangerous.
So there should be an option for power users to turn them off for a set period. That would be a helpful reminder.
I've worked for software and hardware companies, and don't see this as a purely altruistic feature. If it was, they'd give me an option to turn it off.
It's harassment no more, no less, if this was a tactic employed by a sales person knocking on your door repeatedly, I think most people would become irate.
I would be less annoyed if there was a way to roll back. Even the evil empire (Microsoft) lets you do this.
I'll never forget the day I learned that to Apple a "backup" does not mean that you can go "back" to your previous state. An update f4#@ed up something on my iPad. I thought "No problem I'll just restore my backup!" Dutifully restored ... to exactly the post upgrade state (minus all my passwords for email accounts, etc.). No way to go back.
That's what really gets to me. If they never made a mistake, never broke anything, always had backward compatibility, didn't continually slow down older devices until they die ... basically when pigs can fly ... maybe I'd be less pissed. Not providing any roll-back capability is just arrogant and inconsiderate beyond belief.