My gadget lust has been off the charts this past month, partly because my finances are a little less strained than they have been, partly because I've had to get pretty intimate with my PC to troubleshoot frequent lock-ups (BIOS update seems to have solved it, though I'll give it another day before I declare victory) and partly because my ancient iPod seems to have finally shit the bed.
I'll define "gadget" broadly to include PC components, but some things I've been lusting after:
1) Nook Color: this device is looking like a very nice replacement for both my stolen netbook and the dead (though perhaps recoverable) iPod. It runs Android 2.1 natively, and there are stable ROMs of 2.2, 2.3, and even a 2.3/3.0 hybrid, as well as a less stable 3.0 build, many of which can boot from a SD card without so much as rooting the factory install. With a 32GB SD card, I would have room for a generous music selection, as many ebooks as I'd like, some comic books, a movie or two, and plenty of apps. I'm also interested to play with Android a bit, but prefer to stick to a data-capable dumbphone, and don't really want to use my phone for books and music.
2) Any 100GB+ SSD for my OS(es) and core programs. It's hard to justify in terms of storage, given that you could have 3-4TB of HDD storage for the cost of a 120GB SSD, but my HDD is my system's weakest link, and decent SSDs are just getting within a quasi-reasonable price range. Based on reviews, I expect I'd see noticeably improved start-up and load times for my OS and any programs housed on the SSD.
3) Bigscreen, baby! My PC is my entertainment center, and while my 22" is perfectly adequate at PC distance, it's a bit underwhelming from across the room. It would be nice to bump it up to a 32" or 42" with my current monitor as a secondary display.
4) PS3. I'm not much of a console gamer, though it is my preferred format for racing and martial arts fight games, and better for some RPG/adventure hybrids. I do, however, know several complete non-gamers who use the PS3 as the hub of their home theater system. It seems like a device that would add considerable flexibility to any set-up.
So what are you lusting after? iWhatnots are noticeably absent from my list, and I'm not a complete hater--my iPod Video was great for what it was--I'm just not a fan of the way they've approached their app and content markets, and as someone with at least the dimmest understanding of what my devices do, I can get a lot more value out of hardware configurations intended for the Android and/or PC market.