I have never shot with APS and don't think I will.
For a long time, I was drooling over a Canon Elph/Ixus. Fantastic looking little camera. But by the time I finished evaluating if they were worth the money, APS had all but disappeared!
The sad thing about APS is that it can't be home processed unless you modify a 35mm spool. And then, you have to sleeve the negatives because you need a special punch to shape the end of the film so that it can be re-attached to the cassette.
I think this APS revival thing is a bit of Mike Raso's work as I don't think the format will ever come back.
110 had a chance because it allows very small cameras to be used.
But APS, it's too close to 35mm to be of any serious advantage.
When they were designing the APS, I remember reading that it was supposed to be 35mm compatible with an added magnetic track to write some more data. Just like all prototypes, somebody screwed-up along the way and decided to make it incompatible.