Here's the ffmpeg command line we use to transcode to MPEG-4 h.264 in our production environment. We've tested the output on several Android devices, as well as iOS. You can use this as a starting point, just tweaking things like frame size/frame rate and qfactor.
ffmpeg -y
-i #{input_file}
-s 432x320
-b 384k
-vcodec libx264
-flags +loop+mv4
-cmp 256
-partitions +parti4x4+parti8x8+partp4x4+partp8x8
-subq 6
-trellis 0
-refs 5
-bf 0
-flags2 +mixed_refs
-coder 0
-me_range 16
-g 250
-keyint_min 25
-sc_threshold 40
-i_qfactor 0.71
-qmin 10 -qmax 51
-qdiff 4
-acodec libfaac
-ac 1
-ar 16000
-r 13
-ab 32000
-aspect 3:2
#{output_file}
Some of the important options affecting Android compatibility are:
-coder 0 Uses CAVLAC rather than CABAC entropy encoding (CABAC not supported on Android)
-trellis 0 Should be shut off, requires CABAC
-bf 0 Turns off B-frames, not supported on Android or other h.264 Baseline Profile devices
-subq 6 Determines what algorithms are used for subpixel motion searching. 7 applies to B-frames, not supported on Android.
-refs 5 Determines how many frames are referenced prior to the current frame. Increasing this number could affect compatibility
After we encode our video with this ffmpeg recipe, we also pass the video through qt-faststart. This step rechunks the video for streaming. We stream it over HTTP to an embedded VideoView within our Android app. No problems streaming to any Android device we're aware of.