That's not what she said at all...
A lot of what she says is true.
Navigation in android is better (no need to tap for the next direction.. whether or not this is to avoid paying royalties to NAVTEQ doesn't matter to a consumer.. they want real turn-by-turn directions without requiring additional user input)
A number of the complaints are from just using the phone and trying to figure out how to use it without looking anything up. People are jumping in to help her figure things out, which is a good thing. Thankfully there seems to be a help tutorial included with 7720 that will ease new users into how to use the various features of the device.
The speech complaint is valid.. on android you don't have to pause your sentence and wait until the phone is "ready" to listen to you.. it is able to parse your entire phrase.. including the initial instruction to text somebody and finally the message you want to send.
Personally, I don't mind the pauses.. they give me time to collect my thoughts and the confirmations allow me to make sure I don't send a funky text message. Another aspect of android that handles speech better is that it is tied into the keyboard itself (starting in android 2.3).. so you can use it anywhere you can input text and lastly you can use it to play audio files in android, whereas you can't use it that way yet in WP7.
Overall, her first weeks impressions put quite a few important marks in the positives column for the device and for someone who was initially skeptical and thinking that the challenge was a mistake for Microsoft, I think that says something about the quality of what microsoft is building here.
For the record, i don't use WP7 because I think it does everything better than iOS or Android.
I use WP7 for the following reasons -
1. Best UI of any currently available smartphone (speed, fluidity, content-centric,legible,aesthetically pleasing)
2. Zune pass
3. Amazing software keyboard (imo, this is the best SW keyboard on the market)
4. Social network integration (perfect for me.. I don't generate content, but I like to read it)
5. Xbox Live integration
6. Bing services (local scout, vision, music)
The UI is enough to keep me here for the foreseeable future, but the other features in Mango and further down the road will make it hard to leave.