3. Freedom! Anti-Apple rant: Apple's ecosystem walled garden is beautiful but when you look behind the fern tree you see a barbed wire fence.
I used to think this way as well.
I made my own PCs, rooted my galaxy S, had a friend I would constantly tease as an Apple fanboy, etc. Then, 8+ years ago, I tried an iPhone. I realized I couldn't customize it to the same extent as the Android, but it actually worked as advertised. I didn't have to constantly dick with it to keep it working right, or root it to get rid of the bloatware installed. Even the apps were nicer in iOS, even though they were supposed to be the same app. An iTunes backup was a complete copy of my phone. So if something happened, like a broken screen that they can't fix it because they don't have replacement screens for that version of your Galaxy S phone so they'll have to ship you a new one, you can get your contacts back. Next I got an iMac, I'm typing on it now even though it's nearly 10 years old, took some getting used to but I liked it. No constant fussing to keep it working and free from PC based hi-jinxery. Finally I got an AppleTV, then I was really sold on the walled garden ecosystem. My phone, desktop and streaming device all talked to each other, automatically.
That was a long time ago, ancient history in terms of tech, so I'm sure things have improved. But, at the time, there was a lot of hype in the android world that didn't hold true for me. I realized I had too many hobbies, so I gave up on fiddling with my devices. Except for building one Hackintosh as a media server.
Apple's not for everyone, but I like it because it just plain works.