For a few different reasons I wasn't originally intending to get into wind power - most notably because my city has a blanket ban on wind turbines! But I've spent enough time here to catch the bug... Bought the Dans' book, and realized I'm not yet set up to build anything like that, and having more money than sense (being single can have that effect at times!) I wound up buying an Air Breeze turbine.
I live at the foot of a hill - four houses to my south, the top of the hill is higher than the roof of my house! Naturally, the prevailing winds around here are S-SW. (I figured out it would take a 60 foot tower just to clear the roofline of the houses at the top of the hill.)
So not a lot of chance of getting much wind speed, thus why I went with the Breeze - it appeared the best bet for low wind conditions.
I don't expect lots of power from it, just the fun of playing with it. And as others have said, it's a lot more fun to watch than the solar panels!
Here's the end result:

The wires crossing the frame are an HF dipole and a guy for a higher antenna just out of the frame (I'm an amateur radio operator). Neither is anywhere near the turbine.
You can see off to the left my anemometer. It's mounted about 8 feet above the ridge of my roof, and about 25 feet off the ground. The turbine is 18 feet off the ground, and just peeks above the roofline of the house. I could push it up another 2-3 feet, and at this point every foot seems to make a big difference, but then it would be visible from the street. It's already visible in a narrow window to either side of the house as you pass by, don't want to draw too much attention...!
But it does work. It's regularly providing 25-30W, and on the stronger sustained gusts (around 20MPH) it'll get up to around 120W. (It's advertised as 200W at 28MPH.) Of course, the wind isn't nice and steady, so it slows down and even stops fairly often. Even on this overcast day, my Harbor Freight solar panels have outperformed it in total AH!
Still, average wind speed at my house was only around 9 MPH today with plenty of lulls to 6 or less (below cut-in). Will have to wait for a windier day. And if it's a south wind, that'll be a heckuva windy day - my averages run about 1/3 what the nearby airport reads for south winds! Fortunately, anything not directly south immediately increases my wind speeds.
A north wind is most useful - I see about 2/3 what the airport does for those. I'm not too keen on any more winter weather, but it would be nice to have some of those winds again to test this out. I have a pretty clear shot to the north, so tend to get much more stable winds from that direction as well.
Putting this in also prompted a battery upgrade. I was using a single 100AH AGM under my ham bench. That is apparently too small for the Air Breeze (they recommend a minimum of 400AH for a 12V system, and I did have some problems with voltage regulation on it) so finally made my long-planned upgrade to 6 T-105s cabled for 12V. Now I can run the ham bench for a week! :-)