[19:33] I've been using an iPhone SE for the past six months. My first reason was to get to know iOS a bit better, since I had never had my fingers on it for more than a few moments. My second, rather long term reason was the fact that Apple provides updates for their devices for a longer time than most manufacturers shipping Android. My previous phone, for example, was stuck with Android 4.4 and would never see an update. A dangerous fact, which had me trim the Android back to a camera and portable audio player, always in airplane mode to keep it away from the internet.
In the beginning I liked the iPhone. Switching to it was fairly easy, quality seemed decent, the system responded quickly. The few apps I required did work without any difficulty. My only objection was the microphone, because more often than not people aksed me to call them from another phone because they could hardly hear me. An issue that I worked around using a headset.
However, in the last two months the overall picture began to shift. The phone app would occasionally be completely silent, me not hearing my conversational partners at all, neither regular, nor on speaker or headset. Also, sometimes the phone wouldn't dial but immediately quit the call, forcing me to fiddle with airplane mode. To boot, the phone would not accept my SIM card PIN when I restarted it, always forcing me to unlock the SIM with my PUK and set a new PIN -- which, again, it would somehow lose. (I'm keeping and updating this in my password manager. It is not like I'd always enter a wrong number.)
Some really annoying issues that I never faced on Android. Issues that could cause trouble, too. I missed an important call from the company I work for this morning, because the phone yet again decided to be all silent (which, as I double checked, was not a settings issue) and only responded two hours later. Good thing I can dial into our servers from home and quickly fix stuff if need be. Still, it cost me two hours, which might have been fatal.
Really bad impression I got from this phone. I'll most likely be back on Android sooner or later. Maybe Treble, to be introduced with Android O, will help improve this affair with phones not getting updates. Else I'll just stick with cheap devices to keep for one year and switch whenever those are out of support. Since my needs are pretty low, this might work for me.