Joined on 11/26/10
Wroks great

Pros: Worked right out of the box on my new AMD build (see below). Great value.
Cons: Hard to put in to my motherboard, though that was most likely the DIMM slots, not the RAM.
Overall Review: My build: AMD Phenom II x6 1090t ASUS M4A89TD PRO/USB3 AM3 AMD 890FX SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX AMD Motherboard Gigabyte Radeon HD 6850 1 gig Western Digital Caviar black 7200 RPM, 640 GB Antec 900 case 8 GB Corsair RAM LG CD/DVD combo drive 900W modular PSU
Worked for a while

Pros: -Works with AMD Eyefinity (on my old Radeon HD 6950) -Worked well while it lasted
Cons: -Failed after about a year and a half
Overall Review: Bought this to replace a StarTech adapter that failed on me after 3 years. This one lasted only 1 and 1/2 years before failing. Now I need to buy a third one. Hopefully the next one lasts longer, but it certainly won't be another one of these.
Some battery issues

Pros: All in all a high quality product. Functions as expected.
Cons: After a year and a half of ownership (beyond the 1 year warranty) the tablet would no longer start. The screen would flash briefly when the power button was depressed, but nothing else happened. The battery also would not charge. Upon further research, I found that a common issue caused the battery connection to become loose. I was able to easily open the case and plug the battery back in, and now it works fine.
Works for Eyefinity

Pros: Works well, solidly built. Bought this to run a third monitor in AMD Eyefinity on a Radeon HD 6950 and it works like a charm. Now if only it was cheaper...
Cons: not free. It annoys me that AMD advertises their video cards as supporting 3 monitors, but you need to buy an adapter to actually use three.
Great case

Pros: I've always liked Antec's cases, and this one is no exception. There's tons of space and plenty of room for cable management alongside the drive bays. One qualm I've had with Antec's cases is their use of molex power connectors for the case fans, as opposed to 3-pin connectors. This means the fans are drawing power directly from the PSU, not via the motherboard, so the fan speeds cannot be set using software. That being said, there are some variable speed switches on the back of the case which make adjusting fan speeds a snap (not all Antec cases have this, so I was pleasantly surprised). The front cover is metal, but it has a fabric insert attached to the inside of the front bezel, which acts as a filter, and there are fan mounts for two additional 120 mm fans in the front. Oh and this case is very well built and sturdy.
Cons: No 3 1/2 inch drive bay mounts. Although it's not advertised as such, Antec cases I've bought in the past included a bracket for mounting a 3 1/2 inch drive in one of the 5 1/2 inch drive bays. Front i/o cables are a little short, you might have to stretch them right over top of the motherboard.
Works

Pros: It's a modular power supply, which makes cable management much easier, especially when working in small cases. Not much else to say about it. It glows red (ohhh...shiny).
Cons: There is 1 PCIe power cable directly connected to the power supply (not modular and cannot be removed). That kind of defeats the purpose of a modular PSU if you ask me, but oh well. This was a budget build, so I had no use for the one PCIe power connector and it's just taking up space in there, though I imagine most people will be powering a video card with it (maybe the intention?) Weird, but not worth taking off an egg.