Joined on 10/05/04
It works

Pros: The scanner, well, scans, and is cheap. I use it to archive my documents from classes so I don't have a bunch of paper lying around. It's USB powered, so no messy cables. It actually has a pretty decent program for Mac OSX(MP Navigator EX) which does scanning multiple pages into a PDF, copying and OCR.
Cons: Sometimes small vertical lines(not text) disappear when using the scanner. I haven't really looked into the causes of this. Also, the scanner doesn't have an automatic document feeder which is a bit annoying when scanning a bunch of pages at once. The scanner also does not support duplex scanning, but that's a feature found only in expensive scanners.
Overall Review: I haven't tested the scanner with photos or anything other than black-and-white documents but I'd expect them to turn out fairly well.
DOA

Pros: It's cheap and small.
Cons: It arrived DOA with a bunch of bad sectors. When I tried to run Spinrite on the drive, the drive clicked and crashed spinrite. Worst part was, I noticed this after loading data on the drive.
Overall Review: I ended up returning the drive and getting a Rosewill enclosure and a WD drive instead of this drive(at a premium of ~$50 over this drive). I don't know if the problem was specific to my drive or not, but the fact that this drive only has a 1 year warranty combined with the fact that it was DOA with bad sectors makes me not want to recommend this drive.
A bit hard to push in

Pros: It's an eSATA cable and it's retractable.
Cons: It's hard to push in the connectors. The cable that came with my rosewill enclosure slides into both ports easily, but this cable requires a bit of force to get it in place.
Overall Review: The fact that the connector takes force to get in may be a reason not to buy this(since the presumption is that you'll be constantly plugging/unplugging it in), but at $4.99, who can argue?
Could be a bit better designed

Pros: It's an ethernet cable and it's retractable.
Cons: It's a bit flimsy and weird. There are these tiny plastic guards(to protect the connectors) at the ends of the cable which you have to lift up for the cable to work.
Overall Review: At $4.49, I'd say buy it, but I'd much rather pay a couple more bucks for a more solid ethernet cable.
Appealing and functional

Pros: It looks nice - that can't be said for a lot of USB hubs. Basically it's a tall, slim rectangle atop a black stand. One side of the tall rectangle has Rosewill written on it with the port numbers. It's shiny. It's also powered, so things like mice and usb powered hard drives will work on the hub. 7 ports should be more than enough for most needs.
Cons: It's a bit pricey compared to other hubs, but $20 isn't that much in the whole scheme of things.
Overall Review: It comes with an AC adapter and USB cable - so no need to buy these separately.
Great for my Macbook Pro

Pros: It works with my Macbook Pro and my Rosewill enclosure. It's cheap. It works with OSX.
Cons: It can't boot with my Macbook Pro. But this isn't really a criticism of the card so much as the EFI firmware on the MBP.