Favourite sites? A company called balthaser.com - it's a flash design studio in America. There's a kind of pre-war style video about how the internet is coming alive and we must fight html. Another is DogDoo.com which will send "PooPoo packages of a size of your choice". It reminds me of coffee shops because they've got an Econo-poop, PooPoo Special and PooPoo Grande. The latter is 2lb of messy material from a 110lb dog, apparently.
Last online purchase? Some flights up to Newcastle.
Most recent technological faux pas? The most recent, and probably the most embarrassing, was a conference call with some colleagues and another lady in the US. At the end, we thought one of the three of us had hit the off button when she put the phone down. We carried on the discussion, which was extremely complimentary, and then realised it was being recorded.
Main news sources on the web? I use three on a regular basis. BBC news to get a view of what's going on in the UK. I use the ft.com digest to get very focused news on media, finance or IT. And I use the Revolution daily update to find out what's going on in the industry.
Most persistent spam emailer? Somebody who offers to take on county court judgments in the US. I keep getting these court judgments on people in Alabama. I've never even been to Alabama.
Time spent on the web? Unfortunately, all day - and 95% of stuff I do on the web is to do with work.
Next boo.com/clickmango? If you're an online retailer and you can't clearly differentiate yourself from a well known offline retailer with an online presence, then I think you've got a problem.
Least useful site/s on web? Those sites that basically spend their time grouping affiliate buttons.
Most useful site/s on web? It's probably streetmap.co.uk. I go to meetings a lot and it's really useful to know where you're going.
What screensaver do you use? None at present. They're quite entertaining for a while but I've had so many virus attacks I tend to use my PC for work.
Most irritating thing about the web? The fact that it's so huge and you know that something is out there but you just can't find it. It really is needle-in-a-haystack stuff.
Do you bother with old media? Oh yes. I listen to John Humphrys in the morning and sometimes you just want to read a paper.
• Gary Morrison is joint managing director of webrewards.co uk.