FWIW, mine has arrived and I unpacked it today and played with it a bit.
For $150, it's a very good meter. It's not a $450 meter, tho (of course), let alone a $1100 Agilent.
Big, bright, easily readable display.
It does beep a lot needlessly, but I don't find it too annoying. The continuity check is not latching, but it's fast and loud - good enough for me.
I checked accuracy against a Doug Malone DMMCheck, a Fluke 876B, and a 40 year old 5.5 digit Systron Donner 7205 meter (in reasonably good calibration).
It's accurate - clearly within the stated specs (but not perfect of course). Not as accurate as the Systron Donner, but a digit more than the Fluke and always in agreement +/- 1 count (of the Fluke). In particular in most modes I notice it doesn't read zero even if you short the leads (it reads up to 5 counts away from zero). Not a big deal, and probably normal for a 80,000 count meter in this price range.
But it would be nice to figure out which trimpot adjusts the zero reading.
(But it has the relative measurement function, so you can do it manually if you really want.)
The backlight doesn't come on by default (for no reason, considering it's AC powered), and it doesn't remember that it was turned on the next time you power it up.
On the other hand, if I hold down the backlight button on power up, and keep it held down, it boots OK, backlight goes on, and everything works. So I could just short the button closed if I really wanted - not sure if it bothers me enough to do it yet.
I haven't tried the RS-232 output yet; tomorrow, probably.
Anybody who wants to know anything about it, just ask.