「the Future」を含む日記 RSS

はてなキーワード: the Futureとは

2025-11-15

ドイツは極端な労働者不足?日本との違いは? “We need to become a country more open to immigration.”

Will Germany ever escape its economic crisis? | DW News

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=llK0YRvmIng

🇩🇪 ドイツ労働者不足に苦しむ理由インタビュー内容+背景を整理)

✅ 1. 労働力(働く人数・働く時間)が足りない

インタビュー専門家が強調していたのは:

“We just don’t have enough hours worked… We don’t have enough workforce.”

まり

「働く人そのものが足りない」+「働ける時間の総量も足りない」

→ これがドイツ経済の成長を押し下げている。

主因:

少子高齢化日本と同じだが、スピードもっと早い)

団塊世代の大量引退

専門職不足(エンジニアIT看護製造技術者など全領域

産業構造が輸出型なので労働力不足がそのまま国全体の伸びを止めている

ドイツ政府専門家の言う通り 「移民もっと積極的に入れるべき」 と考えている。

🇯🇵 日本との違い(製造輸出国という点は似ているのに)

🔍 違い1:入国政策正反対

ドイツ

労働移民の大量受け入れが政策の中心

海外労働者へ「ビザ緩和」「手続き簡素化」「永住の道」を提供

IT技術者医療介護を積極誘致

日本

技能実習から特定技能」へ少しマシになったが、まだ入国制限が強い

スキル人材にもハードルが高い

永住家族帯同などで制限が多い

結果:

ドイツ世界中から若い労働力が入る

日本労働市場は基本「内側で完結」しようとする

🔍 違い2:競争相手中国)の台頭の影響の受け方が違う

インタビューで:

Chinais catching up, overtaking us.”

ドイツは高品質世界を取っていたが、中国品質価格両方で迫ってきた。

→ 「価格競争力」の低下がドイツの輸出を直撃。

日本はすでにこの問題20年前から直面していて、製造業の海外移転が進んでいたためダメージ分散されている。

🔍 違い3:エネルギー危機の打撃

ドイツロシア依存が大きかったため、ウクライナ侵攻でエネルギー価格が急上昇

製造業中心の国にとっては大ダメージ

日本LNG調達多角化が出来ていて影響は限定的

🔍 違い4:自動車産業の転換が遅れた

“The automotive industry… switched too late.”

ドイツの強み=自動車(燃焼エンジン

EV化で大きく遅れた(日本も似ているが、ドイツは輸出依存度がもっと高い)

🔍 違い5:消費者心理の冷え込みと不安

インタビューで:

“Consumers are more scared… cautious.”

ドイツコロナエネルギー危機物価高・国際関係不安

国民が消費しなくなっている

日本も似ているが、

ドイツは「危機の直撃度」が高い(地理的にも、エネルギーでも)

🇩🇪 なぜ「労働者不足」がより深刻なのか(日本と比べて)

項目 ドイツ 日本

少子高齢化 深刻 深刻

労働移民 大量に受け入れる方針 受け入れは限定的

女性労働参加 高い 高いが賃金は低め

就労時間 EU基準で短い 比較的長い

経済構造 製造業+輸出依存度が非常に高い 製造業は縮小、サービス多め

エネルギー危機の影響 かなり大きい 比較的小さい

産業競争 中国に強く直撃 中国に押されているが分散

結論

ドイツは「人が足りない」ことが日本より直接的に経済成長を止めている。

そして輸出型製造業の国なのに、

中国競争力上昇

労働者不足

エネルギー

という三重苦でストップしている。

ーーーー

ドイツは「極端な労働者不足」+「競争力低下」で経済が停滞中

日本と同じ「製造業輸出型」なのに、なぜこんなに違う?)

あなた質問に直接答えると:

結論ドイツは「労働者が足りなさすぎる」+「輸出競争力が価格面で負け始めている」。

日本は「人はいるが賃金が上がらない」+「国際競争力は質ではまだ持ちこたえている」

① 🇩🇪 ドイツの最大の問題:とにかく働く人がいない(深刻度MAX

動画経済学者も強調:

“We just don’t have enough labor.”

“The number of hours worked in Germany is too low.”

まり

若い人口が少ない

高齢化が激しい

大学で長く学ぶため社会に出るのが遅い

移民受け入れが遅れた

→ 国全体で「労働時間」が激減

ドイツ政府移民受け入れを急拡大しているけど、それでも全然足りない。

🔥 日本少子高齢化だけど、決定的に違う点:

日本は「女性高齢者労働参加」が高いため “労働市場はギリギリ維持”。

ドイツはそこが弱い。

② 🇩🇪 ドイツ製造業の国際競争力が落ちている(特に価格

動画でも語られてたように:

Germany has lost price competitiveness.”

Chinese products are catching up and overtaking us.”

昔のドイツは「高品質・高価格」で圧勝していた。

しか現在

中国韓国品質向上

ドイツ人件費が上がり、価格競争で不利

為替ユーロが重い

しかドイツ天然ガスが高騰しエネルギーコストが高い

まりブランド力では強いが、価格で勝てない。

🔥 日本との違い

日本円安により「価格競争力が異常に高まっている」

ドイツユーロ高+賃金高で「価格競争力が弱い」

③ 🇩🇪 自動車産業の “電動化” 対応が遅れた

動画でも言ってた通り:

“We missed the signal… combustion engines are not the future.”

まり

VWBMW、Mercedes が EV への転換で遅れた

Tesla、中国メーカーが先行

ドイツの主産業の一つが弱体化

日本EV遅れと言われるけど、ハイブリッドで強いため “まだ救われている”。

ドイツは完全電動化路線政策転換したため打撃が大きい。

④ 🇩🇪 政府投資が“票集め”に流れてしま

動画最後批判されていた内容:

“Funds are being used to cater to voter clientele.”

“Not used for long-term productive investment.”

まり

老齢者向け給付

通勤補助

レストラン業界支援

など「短期人気取り」に予算が流れ、インフラ教育デジタル化など“未来投資”に回っていない。

🔥 日本との違い

日本も似た傾向あるが、

ドイツのほうが政治の調整がうまくいかず “改革が進まない影響” が直接成長率に出ている。

⑤ 🇩🇪 エネルギー危機の影響が日本より深刻

ドイツロシア産ガス依存が大きかったため、

ウクライナ戦争でガス激高騰

産業エネルギー価格が跳ね上がる

製造業のコストが大幅上昇

日本も高かったけど、ドイツほど致命的ではない。

まとめ(最重要ポイント4つ)

主要項目 ドイツ 日本

労働者不足 極端。移民がなければ維持不能 まだ耐えてる(女性高齢者労働率が高い)

製造競争価格で負けている(中国に追い抜かれ始めた) 円安で逆に強化されている

自動車産業 EVで遅れ=産業基盤が揺らぐ HV強い=まだ安定

エネルギーコスト 超高い(ロシア依存反動) そこまで致命的ではない

政治対策 未来投資より人気取りに流れがち 同じ傾向だが被害比較的小

からドイツは「労働者が欲しくて仕方ない」

動画でも言及

“We need to become a country more open to immigration.”

ドイツはこれから数十年は

IT技術系・エンジニア系・医療系・研究系の移民を大量に受け入れる必要がある。

日本外国人移民反対!!日本を取り戻せ!!

2025-08-22

わたしがおどろくことの一つ

2001年に元BIE議長の2人が、「このままでは万博存在意義を失う」とはっきり書いていることが、2025年に日本人ほとんどが共有していないことだ。

万博歴史』(平野暁臣)第6章より。2000年ハノーバー万博の1000億円規模の大赤字その他の問題噴出に対しての発言

「What of the Future?」Ted Allen & Patrick Ried 『The Great Exhibitions 150 Years』John Allwood 2001

平野氏の訳によると、

最初の一歩を踏み出し、ゆるぎない一致団結した行動を起こさなければ、すでに信用を失っているこのメディア消滅してしまうかもしれない。また同時に、その最盛期に文明の進展におけるマイルストーンになってきたという活動成果がもたらす利益のうちまだ残されているものについても失ってしまうことになるだろう。」

勇気をもってBIEの役割根本から問い直し、問題本質真正から取り組むこと以外に、このメディアを死の床から再生させる道はない。」

清水建設社長の「もう間に合わない」発言を思い出す。

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)

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)

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.

ログイン ユーザー登録
ようこそ ゲスト さん