And then what? Is Apple going to receive the error log and dispatch a technician to your house to fix it?
In my experience sending crash data to software companies has never resulted in my satisfaction, nor has using some 'wizard' to diagnose an error. As alluded to above these systems are just not smart enough to actually know what's wrong. If the original programmers could create a fully automated flow to repair all error conditions then why bother notifying the user at all?
Apple doesn't have to lift a finger beyond showing an error message with some kind of identifier. The user isn't expecting an onsite visit anyway. They can go to the local Apple store and explain the issue to an employee there, instead of wasting time trying to reproduce the error.
If they're not tech-savvy (and you would never talk to Apple store employees besides at the checkout counter if you were), they likely won't be able to reproduce the error anyway. They'd fumble around trying to explain what went wrong, and the employee would run through multiple scenarios trying to reproduce it.
In my experience sending crash data to software companies has never resulted in my satisfaction, nor has using some 'wizard' to diagnose an error. As alluded to above these systems are just not smart enough to actually know what's wrong. If the original programmers could create a fully automated flow to repair all error conditions then why bother notifying the user at all?