Comparing an android phone with a non-android one is a really subjective thing. You can Compare them 100 different ways, and get 100 different results. For example, we already know that LG failed extremely hard in the security of this phone. IDK about iStuff, but I can't imagine that their data security is anywhere worse than what it is in this phone. Benchmarking how fast the processor is adding some numbers together doesn't really tell you much when you have layers and layers of other gui code on top of that. Maybe the ios operating system is less resource hungry than the bloated java virtual machine that android uses. There's also the subject of updates. All we have seen in the way of updates is the quickmemo. Our version of android is something like 18 months old. And I really don't expect to see any updates to 4.X unless it comes from the community. I dont think apple lets you go a week without making you agree to a 200 page license and some sort of upgrade. That iphone also has a bigger screen with a higher resolution. This benchmark looks like it only tests how the two compare in running some native code.
That being said, this is a pretty decent little beast. Especially when you can get one from bestbuy for $50 and get in on the $25/mo plan. Even before overclocking, it handled n64 and psx emulators with the sixaxis controller without a hickup.