> That trepidation and sinking feeling of “What are they going to break this time?” every time the WWDC’s date approaches, has been wearing me down in the past few years. What one should feel, instead, is: “Apple got this. I’m in good hands. I see no reason not to upgrade straight away.” And I haven’t felt this in a long time.
I haven’t looked forward to a release since Snow Leopard, and High Sierra was the only usable version after that. Mojave and onward have been just dreadful. Mac software hasn’t been fun, exciting, or good in a long time, sadly.
I might agree with the summary if there was any examples given of what they're referring to. If there was even a small list of things that Apple broke every WWDC that anyone besides extreme power users cared about, the point might actually be made. As it stands, it's a lot of "feelings" and not enough substance.
> That trepidation and sinking feeling of “What are they going to break this time?” every time the WWDC’s date approaches, has been wearing me down in the past few years. What one should feel, instead, is: “Apple got this. I’m in good hands. I see no reason not to upgrade straight away.” And I haven’t felt this in a long time.
I haven’t looked forward to a release since Snow Leopard, and High Sierra was the only usable version after that. Mojave and onward have been just dreadful. Mac software hasn’t been fun, exciting, or good in a long time, sadly.