I wasn't going to chime in, but seeing that some answers here seem to be about "I like my code to look like this"... I feel that I should say something :)
"Better" means the code will execute faster, or it's more readable / extendable. You would want to nest your if's in the case that you would possibly have multiple checks that all have a common requirement.
Example:
if (myThingy != null)
{
if (myThingy.Text = "Hello") ...
if (myThingy.SomethingElse = 123) ...
}
EDIT: It also needs to be said that nesting your IF's requires more CPU cycles (and is therefore "slower") than a single IF. On top of that, the order of your conditions can greatly increase performance.
Exapmle again:
if (somethingQuick() && somethingThatTakesASecondToCalculate()) ...
is a LOT faster (of course) than
if (somethingThatTakesASecondToCalculate() && somethingQuick()) ...
Because if the first part of the IF fails, the second part won't even be executed, thus saving time.