In reply to buzby:
Yes, entirely fine. If for no other reason than you'll be asked to ask questions at the end and, while easy to talk about your experience, questions are harder to keep in memory and sensible to have written down.
As a reasonably frequent interviewer, the only other advice I'd give are:
1. Relax. Interviewing someone who appears relaxed and comfortable is a much more positive experience. A warm, engaging and friendly interviewee is more likely to be appointed - the interview stage is, among other things, to see if that personality exists.
2. Rehearse. Memorise, or at least practice, giving 2 examples of answers to typical questions (Times you have dealt with difficult circumstances? Times you have had to perform as a team/without guidance? Describe your work history? Where do you anticipate being in x years?, etc etc). This stuff, while probably being hard to remember, if rehearsed a few times, will almost certainly spring to mind in the adrenaline rush of the interview. The interview will likely start easy anyway, so having a few rote answers you can give early on can build confidence.
Best of luck!