IMHO they are one of the best things that you can use in Java and they save me ages. I'll give you an example: some days ago I was writing an image processing application. All Filters extended a base class called Filter and many of them had properties like contrast, brightness, etc... Now each property will have a default value, a range with a min and a max, a name suitable for the gui. Then there are properties on filters that I wanted the GUI to expose through controls, others that I didn't. So I created the @FilterPropertyAnnotation that you would use like this:
...
@FilterAnnotation(name = "Image contrast", default = 0.0D, min = -100D, max = 100D)
public double getContrast(){
...
}
Then, using reflection, every time the user choose a filter in the GUI it would scan that Filter subclass methods, see which ones have the annotation and display the appropriate controls only for the properties that I marked with the annotation, all of the with the correct default value and scale. I can't think of a simpler or faster way of doing anything like this.
Annotations are for me the best thing in Java.