Show Me Your Desktop, Duncan Riley
Phew… Finally some time to blog again. I usually publish a Show Me Your Desktop interview on Sundays, but due to the screen writers’ strike we’ve had delays this season… Ok that’s not true, the cursed work has kept me busy, but now all important projects and presentations are done.
If you missed last week’s interview with Sarah Meyers head over here to read it. Sarah just launched Pop17.com.
This week it’s Duncan Riley’s turn to Show Me Your Desktop. If you Google Duncan Riley a lot of different articles and posts comes up. Many of them are about why he left b5media in 2006. That’s 1½ year ago, so there isn’t anything interesting in that anymore. Instead I’ll focus on what Duncan does now.
He is one of the more controversial bloggers. His posts on TechCrunch often starts a heated debate. This particular debate extended into this blog post on Duncan’s personal blog. I’m still not sure what the Australian government’s plan is, but what I gather it sounds really stupid.

Duncan also hosts a really interesting podcast show on thepodcastnetwork. Here he interviews a very mixed crowd from local Australian web experts to American money makers.
And now on with the interview.
What is your background picture?
The Apple store in San Francisco I took in July 2007.
Why did you chose that picture?
It seemed appropriate for my Mac Pro. The picture itself has the Apple logo on the store nearly dead middle
If you have a personal and a work computer, which program do you use the most on your personal computer?
I have two computers. A Mac Pro at home, and a Macbook Pro (17″) for when I’m on the road. As I work for myself there’s no personal or work computer as such.
Twitteriffic would get the best work out on both computers, aside from the browser and Mac Mail.
Internet Explorer or Firefox?
Until days ago I would have said Flock. It’s a great browser that in my experience at least is less of a memory hog than FF2 was. I’m now using the latest beta of Firefox 3. The first beta still had memory issues, but as of beta 2 it’s a pleasure to use, and it’s very memory efficient (even more so than Flock). It looks like Mozilla has finally fixed the memory leaks that ruined Firefox 2.Why do you use Fireox?
I was a windows user until nearly 12 months ago, and even then I used Firefox over Internet Explorer. I’m a heavy tab user and Firefox has done tabs from pretty close to the beginning. IE 7 is a vastly improved browser over IE6, but by that stage, like a lot of people, I’d switched to Firefox and had no interest in going back.
You can read the rest of the interview with Duncan Riley on The Beta News.
Duncan has some really interesting blogging tips and a blog HQ that will make most people a bit envious.





Comment by Steve Elliott on 28 February 2008:
Have to agree with him on Tabbed browsing. I switched to Firefox a good while ago and although IE7 now does the business, it is a bigger resource hog on my ageing laptop.
Never heard of Flock though (other than in relation to sheep).
Comment by Dennis Bjørn Petersen on 28 February 2008:
Flock is a great browser. I’ve used it for quite some time. It ’s build on firefox and very stable.
http://www.flock.com
Comment by Phil Benwell on 28 February 2008:
I’ve never heard of flock but the memory news about FF3 is a great relief. I do think that IE7 does tabs better than FF (for me anyway) but i’m still a firefox user for the other benefits.