I think we're at the point that all (good) SSDs are so fast compared to rotating drives that it's splitting hairs worrying about which one to get. You'll love whatever you get.
I certainly agree here (and if you read the TR article above on the new mid-range Intel SSD, they make exactly that point).
My concerns on the SandForce controllers is certainly based entirely on speculation, and is magnified by my uneasiness with the way the company has communicated in the past, NOT on any technical issue that I've ever seen reported in reviews or anything. The on-the-fly black-box compression and internal RAID-like scheme just makes me uneasy since it is all not very well documented and reviewed by the wider community. But that's me, and even with me, it probably wouldn't stop me from buying one if it was a great deal for some reason. That's usually not the case, though. They're usually more expensive than competing drives, and always better performing, but see Matt's point above... Who cares? I don't know... My misgivings aren't evidence-based, so ignore them.
As far as the reliability thing... I can basically agree with Matt here a bit too. I, also, personally have an OCZ drive (an Indilinx one, which was fiddly at first, but fine now on Windows 7), and it is great. However, according to all of the stats and evidence I've seen, the OCZ SSDs do seem have the highest failure rate of the major SSD manufacturers. Plus (and these numbers may somewhat mask the officially reported "failure" rate), I constantly see the OCZ drives on Newegg as price-reduced "open box" or "reconditioned" items. That's a clue to me... Still, the overall failure rates for SSDs are all pretty close to each other (other than Intels, which never fail), and are all generally
much lower than those of their magnetic spinning disk cousins.
PS. Both the Boy Wonder (Anand) and TR have some of the best coverage of SSDs out there. PC Perspective also covers lots of SSDs, and has some good stuff, but their testing methods and findings often aren't always the most scientifically rigorous things I've ever read (even from a non-PhD enthusiast point of view). There's just a bit too much fanboyism over there for me to completely trust them.