Joined on 05/05/06
It's Gigabit

Pros: Recognized by Debian and Ubuntu out of the box.
Cons: Doesn't support 9k jumbo frames, only 7k (6k in linux driver documentation.
Overall Review: I should have looked into the more before buying. (Chipset is included in a lot of LGA775 microATX boards RTL8111C)
The thought was there

Pros: - Small footprint - Fits mATX - Fits ATX PSU
Cons: - Choose components carefully with mATX boards. I tried using ASRock B550M PRO4 and Seasonic FOCUS SGX-650, the mb power cable is too stiff/takes makes it almost impossible to put the hard bracket into place. I ended up leaving it + 3 of the HDD bays out in order to close it. - I had to pull the back side out to be able to fit pci cards in the slots. The steel that is rolled up and facing inward was blocking cards from going in smoothly.
Overall Review: I was hoping that this case would work better than it did. I waited too long to try it out so I missed the return window and am stuck with it. Going to be trying SilverStone Technology RM23-502-MINI as the next case in my rack.
Mostly Great

Pros: Simple to install not too much to configure out of the box. Comes with 6 SATAII connections (already using 4).
Cons: On-board NIC doesn't support jumbo frames at 9k... only 7k (at least in Debian and Ubuntu). Will be ordering another NIC to overcome this. Detected DDR2 800 memory as 667 so I had to manually change it in the BIOS.
Overall Review: Used this as the base for a cheap file server at home paired with a Celeron E3200. HD Video obviously wasn't needed for my setup so I can't comment on it. Had to download the driver source for Linux for NIC to see that it only supports 6k jumbo frames (Debian/Ubuntu allowed MTU 7200).