Joined on 07/17/05

Pros: - Silent - Modular! - Long Cords
Cons: - Cords are a bit stiff, makes it hard to route them
Overall Review: Fits and works great in my Antec P182. Cords are JUST long enough to reach the 12-pin ATX connector on the top of the motherboard from the bottom of the case, though it takes a bit of massaging.
Sound Good, Built Quality Abysmal

Pros: - These sound quite good. They have a fairly bass heavy response curve though, so if you're expecting the audio to sound the way the artist recorded it, look elsewhere for a pair of "flatter" headphones. An enjoyable listening experience though. - Quite comfortable to wear, even for long periods of time
Cons: - The build quality is ABYSMAL. I work at a retailer that sells these, and while they are admittedly on "Demo" and used by customers daily who are less than careful, we replace at least one of the 4 pairs we have every week. The band over the top of the head literally snaps in half. For $350, I would expect a product that holds up better than that - as many of the other headphones we carry do.
Overall Review: I bought a pair of Sennheiser HD280's from Newegg about 5 years ago. The sound quality is comparable - tho the Beats sound richer due to their bass-heavy response curve. The build quality is infinitely better though, as I'm still rocking out with them years later.
So far, pretty great!

Pros: - Plex has no hiccups when accessing these drives - even for 1080p content with 5.1 surround. - Reasonably cool, quiet, and no hiccups after 24x7 operation for 2 months as part of a RAID array.
Cons: - Didn't realize they were only 5900rpm drives. But I guess that's also a pro since I didn't notice any sluggishness?
Overall Review: I picked up a pair of these to throw in a Synology DiskStation along with one 4TB WD Red drive (picking up another once I spot a good sale) for purposes of testing reliability between the two manufacturers/disk types, putting data that I don't really care that much about, and backing up the stuff I do to Glacier (web backup from that book company named after a rainforest) in case of simultaneous drive failure. After about two months of non stop operation in a SHR (Synology's proprietary RAID format), none of the drives have given me any problems. One of these drives is running at 31C with the other running at 33C. The WD drive is also humming along at 33C, and is adjacent to the 33C WD drive. All that is to say: performance is pretty much the same with no issues to date!
Cheap, Speedy, Quiet

Pros: Feels quite fast, may be the rest of my system getting an upgrade simultaneously. I don't really hear the noise of the drive at all, at least not enough to distinguish it from the other 3 drives it sits with. Worked like a champ right out of the box.
Cons: Upgraded from an old Seagate 7200rpm SATA II drive to this. WEI stayed at 5.9??? My board supports SATA III, and it is reporting to the OS that the transfer rate supported is 6gbps as it should. A little disappointed that the rating didn't improve at all =/
Overall Review: System Specs: MSI Z68A-GD65 i7-2600k 8gb DDR3 1333 (G.Skill Sniper) Assorted HDDs nVidia 8800gts 512mb Antec P182 Case Seasonic 750w PSU
2+ years in, and WOW.

Pros: I've owned this processor since late 2008/early 2009. Got it just as quad-cores were getting big, but I couldn't afford one, so I stuck with this. Looking back, I couldn't be happier. Accidentally OC'd it to 4.8ghz at one point in time (1st time attempting ANY overclock, didn't know exactly what I was doing) and it STILL made it to the Windows desktop. BLOWN AWAY by the solidness of this chip. Ran it comfortably at 3.8ghz for about a year. At that time, I tested it in VantageMark (I think?) with a score that was only marginally below the then "Fastest Processor in The World." And by marginally, I mean less than 5% less. I came to NewEgg tonight looking for a new graphics card in preparation for BF3 (currently rocking an 8800gts) and thought a new processor might be in order as well. Surprised to see than in the LGA775 realm, this processor is still the one to beat, and that I won't be left wanting :-)
Cons: If buying a new motherboard, an i5 or i7 should be attainable for a similar price, rendering this processor useless. Unless of course you've got yourself an old LGA775 motherboard that you're loathe (or can't afford) to upgrade. Then, this is absolutely the way to go!

Pros: Quiet, rock solid, modular.
Cons: Somewhat stiff cables.
Overall Review: This PSU went into my Antec P182 case as a long-term investment. I'm planning on it lasting me through at least 1-2 builds, and so far, I can say that it's doing so. It is dead silent, and I've never had a problem related to power with the system. The cables were long enough to reach all the connections I needed them to - even when routed through the significantly longer cable-management systems of the Antec case. The modular system is nice because it means I don't have extra cables clogging up the inside of the case. The cables WERE a little on the stiff side, but the overall quality of the PSU more than makes up for the minor inconvenience of the stiff cabling.