arstechnica: With the launch of the iPhone 5 this Wednesday, the big question is whether it's worth upgrading. Many of the new features—the camera specs, the design, probably the processor—impressed us, and some new features—the lack of simultaneous data and voice on Verizon and Sprint, and the lack of global roaming on AT&T iPhones—left us ever-so-slightly disappointed.
As a "just because I can" project, engineer builds the first Android phone with a Lightning port. Since the iPhone 5, the Lightning interface has been a
iPhone 5 users who haven't updated to the current version of iOS will lose a bunch of important features if they don't update.
RIP iPhone 5. It's been a good run.
I still use my iPhone 4. It's my alarm clock and sometimes I watch youtube on the mobile browser late at night.