For me, tea is meant to be relaxing, with just enough kick to motivate you to enter the brisk chilliness outside.
Coffee is for overworked office drons, suffering from sleep disorders and abused work hours.
This is why tea is popular in Europe, while coffee is popular in the US.
(Eg, I get 2 weeks of vacation PER YEAR. This is a perk! Most employees get a few days to a week per year at my place of employment. This about US average. Compare to Europeans and their 1month+ yearly vacation. Easily 2X what I get. Americans work themselves to death, have no time for proper outdoor activities, get shafted by cost cutting corporate policies, sleep poorly, have badfamily lives, and think everything is just fine as long as they get a beer when they get home, get smashed on the weekend, and get to watch american football.)
As for my personal tastes in tea, I like a flavorful, but not overpowering tea, preferably hot. Occasionally I like a nice earl grey. Unlike Kodkod who insists on adding milk, I think this would be vile in earl grey. I drink it straight, without sugar or milk. I find that loose tea in a drip style coffee maker, standard issue in the US, is an easy "no fuss" method of easily making passable tea. Most people try to boil the tea (eww!), or overheat the water for the tea (equal eww!). A coffee maker heats it just to the boiling point, and uses percolation, which lowers the temp slightly. This keeps the leaves at fairy close to the right temp, and the filter retards rate of outflow, so the leaves steep a bit before dripping out into the caraffe.
The alternative is to use a teaball, which is a pita to avoid getting tealeaves all over.
Avoid using bagged tea. It is almost never right.