
If you have ever felt personally targeted by an Apple bug that refuses to die, a new satirical project might feel uncomfortably accurate. Bugs Apple Loves is a recently launched website that takes some of the most persistent issues across Apple’s platforms and reframes them as a running tally of wasted human time.
The site describes itself as “a satirical website documenting how much time humanity wastes because of bugs that Apple seemingly loves so much that they keep them around forever”. That framing sets the tone immediately. This is not a serious attempt at data analysis, but rather a cathartic piece of internet humour built around shared frustration.
At the time of writing, Bugs Apple Loves lists 16 individual bugs. The oldest entry dates back to 2001, under the title Finder Forgets Window Sizes, a problem that many long-time macOS users will recognise instantly. The implication is clear. Some of these issues have survived countless hardware generations, operating system rewrites, and design overhauls.
The full list leans heavily into cheeky subtitles that feel painfully familiar. Mail Search Doesn’t Work is described as having a search bar that is “purely decorative”. Autocorrect Won’t Take No For An Answer sums up the experience of repeatedly correcting text only for the system to undo your fix moments later. AirDrop appears more than once, with separate entries for endlessly searching for nearby devices and for shuffling targets at the last second, sending files to the wrong person.
Other highlights include iCloud Photos being stuck on “Uploading X Items” for weeks, Spotlight remaining stuck on “Indexing…”, and Personal Hotspot refusing to auto-connect until you have tried several times, usually at the worst possible moment. There are also jabs at Apple Watch widgets that refuse to update, chaotic text selection on iOS, and keyboard language switching that randomly stops responding.
Collectively, the site claims that these bugs waste a total of 32.4 million years of human time every year. That number is intentionally absurd and the creators are very open about it being made up. The humour lies in the exaggeration, not in pretending this is serious science.
What makes the site more engaging than a simple joke list is that it lets visitors adjust the assumptions behind the calculations. You can tweak variables such as how many users are affected, how often the bug occurs, how long each failed attempt takes, and how many retries are typically needed. Unsurprisingly, even conservative settings still produce eye-watering totals.
The project is not closed off either. Bugs Apple Loves has a public GitHub repository where users can submit additional bugs or suggest improvements to the site itself. That openness reinforces the idea that this is a community-driven expression of shared annoyance rather than a targeted attack.
While the site never explicitly names Apple in a hostile way, the target is obvious. These are issues spread across macOS, iOS, watchOS, and Apple’s wider ecosystem. Anyone who uses products from Apple for long enough will likely recognise at least a few of them immediately.
Ultimately, Bugs Apple Loves works because it channels frustration into humour. The copywriting is sharp, self-aware, and deliberately dramatic. It does not fix any of these bugs, but it does something arguably just as valuable. It makes users feel seen, heard, and slightly less alone as they once again resize a Finder window or wait for AirDrop to notice a device sitting right next to them.
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