Mods,variable voltage,low resistance,etc are for hobbyists and not necessary in order for a new user to have a satisfactory vaping experience.
Not necessarily. I was of that opinion for a long time, with, more or less, the same set-up you have. Until I got tired of throwing away cartomizers (never had any luck with cleaning them).
I didn't like how much waste I was producing, and even though my Kr8 batteries still work to this day after over 8 months (a friend of mine is now using them), I did have issues with the button sticking a bit, and when my life got busier, I vaped more, just like I used to smoke more, and the battery life wasn't enough. So time to go to atomizers, and a bigger battery.
A regular atomizer just doesn't punch like a cartomizer does, so those didn't work for me - I smoked unfiltered rollies. I had to go to LR's.
Then LR's started frying my eGo batteries because of my heavy use. Time to go to mods.
Every step of the way, whatever I was using previously got given away, plus or minus a back-up battery or two and a charger for it.
I wound up dripping on an LR, screwed into a ridiculous-looking mod, because that was actually what I needed. I'm happy where I am now, and no longer have any complaints or desire to move onto something new. I get
at least 3 months out of an atomizer, my batteries last 1-2 days on a charge, and I can fire my LR until it explodes and it's not going to fry my mod.
It's entirely possible to wind up vaping something that looks like a piece of plumbing out of necessity and not a desire to aquire kit.
I've also known newbies who turned out to need a system like that in order to quit smoking. There's a guy I corresponded with who needed to go to 6v vaping in order to quit. He was vaping something more ridiculous than my GGTB within a couple weeks of starting vaping, because that's what he needed.
Generalizations are really tricky here. Not that there's anything wrong with being a hobbyist in an "arms race" - whatever makes ya happy. And perhaps for these people, keeping things new and exciting helps them stay motivated to vape, and not go back to smoking.
I really think we should pay attention to the newbie we're dealing with, what sorts of questions they're asking, and ask a few pointed questions of our own:
How much do you smoke, and what kind?
How are you with technology?
Do you like tinkering with things or do you want to "set it and forget it" so to speak?
Do you care how it looks?
There's no right or wrong answer to any of these questions. And of course, there is no perfect PV, and we should also let them know they may have to compromise a bit, and to prioritize what their needs are so they can compromise on the less important stuff. And even then, what they like may surprise us. I thought my dad didn't want to screw around with an e-cig at all, so I set him up with a Kr8. Turns out he didn't like vaping until he started dripping. I should have asked more questons, and he may have taken off with it sooner.