I like my Eezy Awn Batwing. Although I am not tall, I use a short ladder to deal with it, and I find it is extremely easy to deploy and it gives me that awning over the door that is really nice when it is raining as well as a huge amount of shade. In Baja, I deploy it and stake it down for long periods of time and it has survived many severe winds. If I know in advance that a big wind is coming, I will stow it away, but that is not always possible. Sometimes, if there is no threat of wind, I will just unzip it and deploy it without putting the legs down, but generally I do put the legs down and hang some cloth grocery (or book bags) full of sand or rocks on each leg to hold it down from any unexpected gust. When pulling it in, I can pretty much do it myself, even if there is a wind blowing. If the wind is blowing from the front of the truck to the back is probably the hardest situation, but I fold it in and then need to pull the loops of fabric into the correct position to then fold them.
What I like most about my Batwing is that all the parts that get stressed are metal and will not break like I have had happen on my Fiamma's (I own two of them on different campers). There is a big rivet at the end of each Batwing rafter that I hang an "S" hook over and then a cord with a truckers' hitch to a good long stake to tie it down. I also have a couple of 6' x 8' nylon tarps that I can hang from the ends of the Batwing rafters to block any sun coming in from the side.
For me, one of the bigest considerations in an awning is survivability in the wind, and that includes how to roll, fold it up in a high wind by myself and the Eezy Awn Batwing works well for me.