Note that the bladders have some disadvantages. Cleaning has been mentioned. Another issue is that the tubes tend to freeze in cold weather. I've seen some that attempt to insulate the tube, but in real cold weather even that doesn't work all that well. When backcountry skiing I carry my water bottle inside a cover with about a half inch of foam insulation, which goes in my pack. Even with that, my water will sometimes start to freeze during the day when out in serious cold.
Aksar, do you blow the water out of the tube back into the bladder when it's really cold outside?
I don't know how cold you're talking about but I've used mine below 0F by filling the tube with air. I believe I learned this many moons ago on Camelbak's website.
For the original question I have and love using Camelbak bladders for the outdoors. I have them with and without the insulated tube.
I first used one bicycle riding and found it so much easier to drink while moving. I frequently leave PLAIN water in it for a week+ , =lazy, and only once had it go funky. Soap and water fixed it. I find them easy to leave unfilled in a backpack and fill when needed. I always keep my bags in the same location as my water so I can throw some bottles in the bag and fill on the way if I have to grab and go.
For street use I EDC a S.S. Camelbak bottle. You can clip a carabiner to it to fasten it onto almost anything.
I had previously used three other manufactures S.S. bottles but I liked the ease of the bite valve the best.
(You can't heat it but I EDC a Steripen and ClO2 tablets.)
One reason I have stayed with Camelbak was that I had a bladder that was at least 5 yrs old when it developed a small hole. I sent them the old one and they sent me a free new one.
Companies that stand behind their product are important to me.
Standard disclaimer, no affiliation except as a happy customer.