Joined on 03/10/07
Solid Gaming Mouse

Pros: Comfortable, not too heavy, not too light, great tracking on just about any surface. The sensitivity/task-switch buttons are a nice touch, altho the task-swtich button only works if the mouse package is running (sensitivity works without). If you don't find them useful, they along with all the buttons can be re-binded through the program.
Cons: It's not really a con, but the dark grey "bubbles" in the pictures that look like small contours in the mouse, arent. They're under the plastic (which is smooth) so I really don't understand the purpose other than making a slick mouse kinda fugly.
Overall Review: I wish the mouse 4 and 5 buttons were a little bigger, but I've been used to a MS Intellimouse 3 for years. Finally went through two of them before I figured it they might be great mice, but aren't made to handle hardcore gamers. Logitech's sold me.
Mobo is great, PCIE placement is plain bad

Pros: Great board, lots of built-in OC options if that's your thing. Runs nice and stable so far. Great mobo in all regards except the PCI-E placement, which is listed in the cons.
Cons: The placement of the PCI Express slot is absolutely horrid. Any larger video card (any decent gaming card) is a very snug fit, as the backend of the card has to be wedge between the mobo power socket from the PSU, and the SATA sockets. If you have a standard ATX mid-tower case, there's issues with the video card placement running into your HDD. The HDD issue is obviously case-specific, but the conflicts with longer video cards and the SATA/Power sockets IS NOT. This makes no sense to me at all, since just about every decent video card is of a larger size, and WILL have placement problems. If your video card's heatsink-fan is located towards the faceplate or the middle of the card, it will work, but IF YOU OWN A DOUBLE-THICK VIDEO CARD DO NOT BUY THIS MOTHERBOARD!!!! The PCI-E placement is just too stupid. Oh and the "SLI Hybrid" they brag about is a complete joke, and nothing but a marketing plot.
Overall Review: I understand WHY they moved the PCI-E slot, as the northbridge has alot of room to breath, and a really nice heat sink, but the issues with video card placement seems like a no-brainer. If you buy a mobo that can support a Phenom, chances are you aren't going to put in some old wimpy video card.
DO NOT BUY

Pros: When working, it's a cheap raid box, although it's not a "real" RAID box, so users needing this for VMWare should look elsewhere. Worked pretty well, if a tad slow, for almost two year...
Cons: ...and then one of my drives died. No worries right? The whole point of going though the trouble of setting up a RAID5 is that I can just replace a dead drive and away I go. WRONG. Replacing the drive has done nothing, the array is still offline. The option to turn the array online or rebuild it are greyed out. Contact Silicon Image (who makes the RAID card/software) and they tell you to take it up with Rosewill. Talk to Rosewill and they tell you to take it up with Silicon Image. *ZERO* support options from either company. So here I sit two days later with a still dead RAID with all my important stuff on it from the past 2 years, 8 TBs worth. The whole point of setting this thing up was to have redundancy in case a HDD failed, and thanks to the absolute failure from two companies, I'm pretty much just destroyed. I've spent hours scouring google only to find that this seems to be a way-too-common occurrence with this box/card, with no fix ever found, and neither company saying a word about it.
Overall Review: I have had mixed results with Rosewill in the past. Let's face it, we buy Rosewill because they're cheap, and as a cheap brand goes, they're not bad overall. But this to me is an ultimate deal-breaker. This is the EXACT situation I was trying to avoid by going through the trouble and the money of setting up a 4 drive RAID5 box. The whole point of this box is to NOT do exactly what it's doing, which is wiping my media and backups out. I'm going with a more expensive RAID1 set up in the future, and I will not be touching a single Rosewill product again. Not even a cable. Vote with your wallet!
Blew up, literally.

Pros: Modular, blue light, cheapish, black. Worked for a few years.
Cons: I thought I heard a faint squeal as I powered down my computer yesterday, turned it on this morning, and the PSU literally blew up. A loud whump followed by several rapid pops, bright sparks, smoke, the smell of ozone, and the back grill of the PSU is burnt. Tripped my surge protector and my breaker. In over 30 years of computer experience I've had a lot of pieces die on me, but this is only the second time I've seen a PSU fail catastrophically like this - and the first time was back in the 80's. I cannot recommend this product to anyone, period. Failure is one thing, a fire hazard is something completely different. I'd recommend staying away from Raidmax entirely, this isn't the first piece I've owned that's died early, though to be fair, it is the first that blew up.
Overall Review: The modular cables are a little odd. Instead of plugging directly into sockets on the PSU, there are 5x 5 inch cables hanging out of the back of the unit, which the modular cables are plugged into. An annoying feature that means you have excess cables, while short, slightly defeats the purpose of buying a modular PSU in the first place.
Absolutely awesome!!

Pros: Air mouse + keyboard in a nice tiny package. Perfect for HTPCs.
Cons: A little touchy on the air mouse, not really that bad though.
Overall Review: This thing is tiny! Much smaller than it appears in the pictures. 5½ x 3¼, which makes it "fat remote" size, which means you'll be typing with your thumbs. Up to you whether that's a pro or a con.
QUIET (no, really!)

Pros: A nice strong summer breeze worth of air flow, at barely any noise at all! Way too many fans call themselves quiet and then end up sounding like a blow dryer. This one really IS super duper quiet!
Cons: Only rotate at 800rpm, so the airflow is not a wind tunnel, which is fine for HTPCs, but I don't think I'd put one of these in a decked out gaming rig.