If you started out using iPhone, then yes, Android has a sort of steep learning curve... but it's not thier fault you want things to work like an iPhone. After learning how to navigate the various settings, Android is not only not that bad, but has many more options straight out of the box. The retina display is very nice, but the slightly bigger screen of Galaxy S phones kind of does make up for the reduction in quality.
More powerful? Not a chance. My Galaxy S II smokes the crap out of my iPhone 4 (not sure about iPhone 4s, but then again it's not easy to overclock it, now is it? It's not much of a chore at all to place a custom kernel on my Galaxy S II and overclock the heck out of it. Although, software for Android isn't made for a phone that powerful so there hasn't been a need for that sort of thing yet (unless you really want bragging rights for having the best benchmark scores)
ipod? Please... there isn't a smart phone around that can't play your mp3 library. Android plays more video formats without having to convert them first. Android definitely wins that round as well. And by the way, not only does the SGS2 have an 8MP back camera with a flash, but it also can take 1080P video and output at 1080P via an MHL adapter (for HDMI).
iPhones win at 1 thing, really. Simplicity. If you want the easiest phone to learn how to use, then iPhone is your choice.
Just broke my personal record for number of consecutive days without dying!
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