I would argue that it is not fine with you, by the sheer effort you have put forth to convince us otherwise, and to even venture into the realm of ridicule.
I have not ridiculed anyone, and certainly that was not my intent. I merely tried to explain why watts is a direct measure of power, which is a direct measure of heat produced in the coil. But voltage is not. I kept it to a technical level except to acknowledge that personal preference, regardless of the technical merits, is something Provape should have considered. And my intent was to try to convince a few people that the Radius should not be written off merely because it doesn't offer VV, even if I think Provape should have included it simply to avoid this technical argument and the overlapping marketing angle of giving people what they want, regardless of the technical merits.
An analogy: you could calibrate an analog liquid thermometer in inches instead of degrees. It is true that the column height of a thermometer is related to temperature. As temp rises, the column rises. You would, over time, learn that
on your specific thermometer 3" is the freezing point, 8" is the hottest day (around 100F) and 6.5" is your favorite outdoor comfortable temperature.
You can argue that that is a perfectly acceptable way - for you - to measure temperature. And you may indeed over time become more comfortable measuring temperature as a function of column height of your thermometer. You might even become very reluctant to change. I would not argue that you should change calibrations just because temperature is more direct and consistently repeatable across thermometers.
It is difficult, though, to argue that calibrating in inches is no better or worse than calibrating in degrees Fahrenheit or Celsius. And further that directly measuring temperature in degrees is unacceptable based on any technical merits. Especially since every height calibrated thermometer would have a different scale correlating different heights to degrees temperature. And this is the case in the vape world, where every different atty resistance results in a different voltage equating to a given power level. I have trouble with the "no better or worse" argument, at a technical level. Inches is demonstrably a poorer proxy for temperature. That is different than "I have a preference regardless of the factual merits and so be it". Personal preference is fine as long as it is accepted as personal preference.