I seriously doubt few if any are jealous of the Tyros 5. Considering my arranger has these features the Tyros 5 lacks, Tyros 5 owners are the ones who would be jealous.

My arranger doesn't force me to choose between 61 or 76 keys, I have both. Two great feeling semi weighted keybeds with aftertouch.

My arrangers built in audio system rivals those by any other manufacturer. No need for me to strap on cheap speakers like those the Tyros 5 uses.

I'm not stuck with some mediocre over compressed drum kits either. I can sample new sounds, load samples from other manufacturers, and mix, edit, and map sounds wherever I want.

I can import audio files, MP3, MP4, AIFF, Wave, even Video and use them all as I see fit.

My arranger has audio drum styles and has had them for 10+ years.

If any factory sound doesn't suit my need, I can edit it, process it, filter it, and manipulate it to suit my needs.

If I want to go beyond what any other arranger can do, I can load in multiple VST's and play them back as if they are native to my arranger. Try as it might, the Tyros 5 isn't in the same league as a high end VST.

My arranger has a large touch screen in addition to numerous real time knobs and sliders that are fully programmable.

My arranger has a 25 note pedal board that also has toe pistons and a swell pedal. All programmable I might add.

I've got the ability to split, stack, or setup numerous sounds all at once on any of the keyboards my arranger has be it upper, lower, or the pedal board.

My polyphony isn't limited by what the manufacturer forces me to have, it varies based upon my processor speed. When using VST's in conjunction with my factory sounds, my polyphony is well into the hundreds.

The voice allocation scheme used by my arranger doesn't cut notes off like Yamaha products do. In fact, unless I stack some insane number of sounds together, for example 4 stacked on top, 4 stacked on bottom, three on the pedal board, then play some monsterous chords at once, you wont ever hear a hiccup or drop out at all.

My arranger does multitrack audio recording, multitrack sequencing, synthesis, sampling, direct disk playback, wavetable, FM, analog modeling, multi FX, and more.

My arranger doesn't use some cheap tiny sliders to mimic a drawbar, I actually have real drawbars for both upper and lower keyboards.

My arranger has multiple audio inputs and outputs in addition to two dedicated microphone inputs.

These features just scratch the surface of what my arranger can do. Unlike many who toss each of their older arrangers to the wayside to buy the "new" model, my arranger has stayed up to date with software and hardware changes.