Android owner here. Hands down, the iPhone user experience, the interface and performance is better than the current Droid models. (I can’t compare to the new stuff that just came out, the Evo/Incredible/HD2, etc.)
I was stuck in a Sprint contract last October though, and planned to jump ship to AT&T to get the iphone, but I wanted an Android to replace my flip phone which had just died an ugly death. So I picked up the HTC Hero.
I have to say, the Hero is keeping me on Sprint, and has turned me into an Android fan. I have no desire to jump over to the iPhone anymore.
As Ursine pointed out above, it’s a PC vs Mac sort of desire. I love the fact that my phone is almost like a little PC in the palm of my hand that I can customize to my heart’s content. I LOVE the multitasking - switching between apps is a snap, and in spite of what people say about task killers and apps killing battery life I can go a full day without recharging. Some of it’s common sense – if you keep the GPS on all day, or have your facebook app sync every 15 minutes life will suffer.
Android’s multitasking nature also gives it one of its best features. The “Windowshade” which Apple could take a page from. It’s a menu bar that gives status updates about incoming texts, application status, downloads, etc. It’s always visible at the top, and if you want to read the detail you just slide it down with your finger for an annotated list. What that means is if you’re sending a text, looking up directions, or entering data on a web page form and someone texts or emails you, you don’t get a popup that wrecks what you’re doing. You can look at the status line, and if it looks important, pull down the shade to read the info, then go right back to what you were doing without missing a beat. No annoying popup you have to clear, unless you want it.
And I love, love, LOVE Google navigation on my phone. It blows away my Garmin Nuvi, has free map updates, has voice search, and I carry it in my pocket wherever I go.
Ursine also brought up the widgets. These are icons that you put on your home screen to let you make setting changes or activate programs. For example, if I want to turn my GPS on and off, I just touch the GPS icon on the desktop instead of having to dig through three screens of menus to get to it. Controls are available for all kinds of settings and apps. Very handy.
Though my phone won’t support it, the 2.2 Android update will allow you to use your phone as a mobile hotspot. You and friends/coworkers in an airport without free Wifi? No problem, turn your phone on and everyone can share the network connection. On 3G it might not be too fast but it’s better than nothing. As a 2.1 user I can only just tether to my own but it’s great to have a net connection when I need it.
I (heart) my Android!