In terms of specs, performance, and features, the iPhone 5 is Apple's best to date. This doesn't mean it's as good as it could be, however.
There were a few egregious omissions from the keynote presentation – features that we not only want in our iPhone, but that we feel are overdue.
NFC for mobile payments
It can handle some (but definitely not all) of the tasks that you might use NFC for. For example, you can't use Passbook to wirelessly send money to a friend via PayPal.
NFC also lets you beam content between devices just by tapping them together. Samsung's Galaxy S III takes advantage of this feature.
Swype
An improved texting solution on the keyboard, like Swype

SD card support for extra storage
We'd like to be able to extend our device's storage capability beyond the 64 GB maximum. History suggests that external SD card support isn't going to be in a mobile Apple device any time soon.
A 128 GB option
The iPod Classic offered users 160 GB of music and video capacity. Many people (ourselves included) had no problem filling it right up.
Now that the iPhone is an easy replacement for your old iPod, we'd love to be able to carry the same amount of content around with us without having to pick and choose what stays at home.
Non-proprietary dock connection

If you want to use your old sync cables, you have to buy this $29 adapter.
A micro-HDMI port
Once again, if you want to get video off of your phone, it requires the use of a special adapter. (Unless you buy a $99 Apple TV.) The Kindle Fire HD and several Android phones use a micro-HDMI port, letting you run a cable straight from your tablet to the television.
This makes it easier, better, and more affordable for the user.
Replaceable battery

We'd love to be able to carry an additional fully-charged iPhone battery that we could pop in whenever the first one bites the dust.
While we're at it, better battery life!

Cradit: Yahoo!
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