I know that I have written a lot about FeedDemon but that’s what happens when you are a fan of product – you want to tell everyone just how much you like it. Such is the case with FeedDemon. I have been using the RSS client for a long time and it is probably one of the few programs you would have to take from my cold dead hands before I would give up on using.
In this day of Twitter, Facebook and all other kinds of fancy social media tools some consider RSS and RSS reader clients – especially desktop clients – to be either dead or dying. I tend to think just the opposite – I think RSS and the clients we use will have a long life.
With that in mind I decided to approach Nick Bradbury, the developer behind FeedDemon, and see if he would be willing to answer a few questions about RSS and FeedDemon. As you can see below he was more than willing to do so and for that I thank him very much.
Continue reading Nick Bradbury and FeedDemon – The Interview »

don’t bother me, but the way I look at it is that I use this program every single day of the week – non-stop pretty well – and it is worth paying for. It is also in my opinion a way to say thank you to Nick for his constant improving of a great program and as an encouragement to keep doing that.
In this day and age of monstrous programs and applications; web or otherwise, that think that memory usage is something to be ignored it is nice to see a piece of software that treats memory like a delicacy. Such is the case with the last few beta releases of
I have been a 

