Nope, sorry, not seeing that. Apple takes every opportunity to shove spec down our throats ("Retina HD display," "first 64 bit phone," "A8 chip," "motion processor," etc).
Back when the iPhone first got released it was all about the UX and they were very careful to avoid specs. This was a Jobs inspired strategy that was very effective at conveying the product's feel over its power.
However, and for a while now, Apple has become just as specs obsessed as Android and are letting the product's feel/UX fall by the wayside.
With the original iPhone's marketing, the question implicitly being asked and answered was "how is the iPhone better than my feature phone / BlackBerry?"
With the iPhone 6's marketing, the question implicitly being asked and answered is "how is the iPhone 6 better than my current iPhone?"
At this point, there aren't that many potential iPhone 6 customers in the US who still don't know what iOS feels like.
Back when the iPhone first got released it was all about the UX and they were very careful to avoid specs. This was a Jobs inspired strategy that was very effective at conveying the product's feel over its power.
However, and for a while now, Apple has become just as specs obsessed as Android and are letting the product's feel/UX fall by the wayside.
Just look at their main iPhone page: https://www.apple.com/iphone-6/
It is primarily about specs (screen, processor, etc). Heck the entire iPhone 6 product is about power/performance/bigger-is-better.