Looks good, but it also looks like way too much work for most days.
We have a Keurig for convenience. Granted, it doesn't make coffee just the way I like it, but it makes it fast with a minimum amount of work.
Keurig is fine if you aren't into coffee that tastes good.
I just do manual pour-over myself, but several friends have aeropresses - they make good coffee; definitely more espresso-like than a french press, like lerxst says. good way to have a decent espresso in the middle of the wilderness when camping, or that sort of thing!
It looks like it would be similar to a French press, but easier on the clean up afterwards.
I haven't had a French press since I broke my little glass one when it slipped out of my fingers when I was washing it :(
That seems to be a it over doing it with the process.
I think once you get the hang of what you like, you could do away with the scale, and maybe the stirring.
Get it down to "put in the ground coffee, add water, let it sit for a bit, and press" and I might be more inclined.
Never tried an aero press, though one of my friends swears by it. I stick with grinding my own beans and a drip pot. IMO, it's the beans that make the most difference, not the method.
I have a Melitta #2 cup and simply pour hot water onto the grounds and wait for it to filter. Simple, cheap, and works for me.