It's absolutely true. If you buy some broken carrier-specific Android phone, or from a shitty vendor like Sony, you are getting a shitty product and certainly an iPhone is better than that. But if you buy a stock android phone made by a good vendor, HTC or Samsung, your phone will kick the ass of any equivalent generation iPhone. And by that I mean is that it will do more things, it will do them faster, and more of them will "just work" without any problem, out of the box.
Android market is also simply a better market, and it's because it's built on a better platform, from the perspective of App developers, and consequently from the perspective of users too. What do I mean by that? It tickles me pink that things like "Angry Bird" are paid apps in the iPhone world. You guys just get ripped off. It should be FREE. But nope, you have to pay. A lot of other apps aren't even available to you, and not always because Apple's being a shithead and shutting it out--which they do--but because App developers often just don't care as much about iPhone, even when there are more iPhones in their target market.
You know why you have to pay for stuff on iPhone that should be free? Because Google has a better marketing engine behind Android, and while as an end user you may THINK you don't care about that, what it means is that it's a lot more interesting (read, profitable) platform for App developers, and they are willing to give away a hell of a lot of stuff for free, to tap into that ad revenue. Try the app and like it, but don't like the ads? There is almost always a pay version that eliminates the ads. But you don't have to pay until you know whether you like the app, and even then, only if the ads are bugging you.
But here's the kicker: We all know that there are probably 100 people out there who are willing to use an app if it's free, for every one person who is willing to pay for it. On the Google platform, the app developer gets paid for all 101 users. On the iPhone, they only get paid by one.
Now it's a small thing, but it demonstrates the fundamental superiority of the Google platform. And by platform, I don't just mean Android. I mean the entire integrated Google infrastructure, that connects your phone to the Google apps/API infrastructure, from Google maps, through Gmail, through Adsense.