I think, in most classes, if the return value from [super init] is nil and you check it, as recommended by standard practices, and then return prematurely if nil, basically your app is still not going to work correctly.
If you think about it, even though that if (self != nil) check is there, for proper operation of your class, 99.99% of the time you actually do need self to be non-nil.
Now, suppose, for whatever reason, [super init] did return nil, basically your check against nil is basically passing the buck up to the caller of your class, where it would likely fail anyways, since it will naturally assume that the call was successful.
Basically, what I'm getting at is that 99.99% of the time, the if (self != nil) does not buy you anything in terms of greater robustness, since you're just passing the buck up to your invoker. To really be able to handle this robustly, you would actually need to put in checks in your entire calling hierarchy. And even then, the only thing it would buy you is that your app would fail a little more cleanly/robustly. But it would still fail.
If a library class arbitrarily decided to return nil as a result of a [super init], you're pretty much f***ed anyways, and that's more of an indication that the writer of the library class made a mistake of implementation.
I think this is more of a legacy coding suggestion, when apps ran in much more limited memory.
But for C level code, I would still typically check the return value of malloc() against a NULL pointer. Whereas, for Objective-C, until I find evidence to the contrary, I think I'll generally skip the if (self != nil) checks. Why the discrepancy ?
Because, at the C and malloc levels, in some cases you actually can partially recover. Whereas I think in Objective-C, in 99.99% of cases, if [super init] does return nil, you're basically f***ed, even if you try to handle it. You might as well just let the app crash and deal with the aftermath.