No, not really. I had two iPhones. They were superb until Steve Jobs died at which point all testing on their updates went out of the window, resulting in an update with bugs soon to be followed by another update with more bugs, and so on.
It went from being unfailingly reliable and a joy to own to being a time-consuming unreliable nuisance. Install an update and you know things will break. Apps won't open. The screen rotation won't work. And so on. Take it out of the house and find yourself needing to use one of the apps and it just shuts itself. Worked the last time. Renders the phone basically pointless. Try to avoid the update and it just keeps on nagging at you and you can't turn that off.
Try to remove an update by plugging it into the PC only to be told there's some sort of communication error and it isn't recognised. Solve that to find that the window for roll-back has expired and you're stuck with it.
The iOS interface is significantly more slick-looking than Android, they're nicely made and seem, superficially, to be a premium product, but the actual experience of owning one is something else. In that respect it is hard to justify a premium price tag.
Replaced with Android phone 18 months ago, worked out how to block all manufacturer and operating system updates - it's not easy and takes some investment of time which will be saved many times over, and here, 18 months later, it still works just as well as when it was new. Everything just works, all the time. What's not to like
