I have the Digisix. I like it a lot, but it has some quirks you should know about.
It is small, light, and seems durable. Has a white dome so it does both reflective and incident metering. I paid extra to get an accessory shoe mount kit - hardly worth the extra money, but nice to have.
It reads out in EV - you then apply that to the spinning dial to get your shutter-speed and aperture settings. This can be a bother to some. I like it because it matches my old fixed-lens rangefinders that lack a meter and have the dreaded LVS shutter-speed / aperture locking mechanism. I just transfer the EV reading to the LVS and I'm set no matter what - no need to twirl the dial on the Digisix. Ideal.
It does not have an off switch. Idiotic design. The battery is hard to get to and fiddly. Also idiotic. It has a very dumb method of setting the ISO - you have to click (beep) click (beep) one ISO value at time until you get to the one you want. Go past it accidentally and you have to step through them all again. Dumb. Plus, it makes noise while you're doing it - I hate that. I want quiet.
It also has a built-in temperature gauge that records the highest and lowest (as I recall) temps it has been exposed to since the stupid thing was turned on. What the heck is that good for? I really don't need it to tell me what the temperature is.
However, as a pocketable meter which I can trust for semi-accurate meter readings while perched on an ancient Agfa Karat IV, I like it very much.
I won mine as second place in a photo contest, else I would not have it - seems a bit pricey for what it is to me. But I'm glad I have it.