I've been looking forward to this ever since I first heard about Cassini on "The Sky at Night". It's quite exciting, the culmination of years of planning, not to mention actual travel time to Saturn.
I wonder what they'll find? Will it be freezing cold hydrocarbon soup lakes? Will it be ammonia ice? Titan doesn't give it's secrets up easily and the heavens have a way of springing a few surprises for us every time.
I can't wait for us to send a probe to Europa, I'd pay money to know what's under that ice. That Jupiter's gravity can supply enough energy to drive Io into a barely stable volcanic world must mean that Europa's core is quite active too, possibly causing hot geothermal vents to pour into the sub-surface oceans, and where there's warmth and energy on Earth, there's life...
It kind of gets me back in touch with the fascinated schoolboy in me that watched Columbia rise into the sky on TV on 12 April 1981 with barely contained enthusiasm, or when I spent my early years pouring over facts and statistics from the Apollo missions.