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As have Android users. Microsoft Phone Link/My Phone Companion and KDE Connect have supported this for years on their relevant PC platforms. The Phone Link Android app is even preinstalled on Samsung devices. There's a teensy bit of setup but nothing complicated. KDE Connect even supports stuff like using the phone as a touchpad, remote keyboard, or media/presentation controller.
If your PC is a Chromebook then you don't even need these. If you sign into the phone and Chromebook with the same Google account, the integration just works, much as it does on Apple devices.
Most of your arguments can be boiled down to "everything is really slick if you use an all-Apple ecosystem". Which is fine, but the same can be said about Android - if you use an all-Google ecosystem with Pixels, Chromebooks and Google Workspace then most, if not all of your complaints about Android go away. Pixel Android is more consistent and less buggy than most vendor versions of Android. Integration with Chromebooks works out of the box. Google Workspace MDM is simple and straightforward, and you don't really need to buy a separate MDM solution.
The difference is that Android at least makes a decent effort to cater for a heterogeneous ecosystem. With Apple, if you're not entirely onboard with an all-Apple ecosystem then it starts getting messy quickly.
Yea this guy seems ignorant of what is available. You can use messages on the web. It's easy. I don't know what anyone looks at texting as a good solution anyways. Messaging apps are far better to use and work across borders without added cost. RCS is cool but still border limiting. Apples ecosystem is cost prohibitive too. The prices they charge for storage and ram on their products is outright absurd.
Trying to get people to install and use them can be frustrating. Some are regionally popular, like WhatsApp in Europe, and most people I really want to talk to use Signal, but the most popular messaging app in the US is probably iMessage, and only because Apple integrated it and SMS in a default app. Google started to do the same thing with Hangouts, but dropped the ball.