Class Action Park

Wikipedia’s entry for Action Park, a (now shuttered) amusement park near my home town in New Jersey, does an amazing job of capturing the spirit that made the park so popular:

Many of Action Park’s attractions were unique. They gave patrons more control over their experience than they would have at most other amusement parks’ rides, but for the same reason were considerably riskier.

Its popularity went hand in hand with a reputation for poorly-designed, unsafe rides; inattentive, underaged, underpaid and sometimes under-the-influence employees; equally intoxicated and underprepared visitors — and the poor safety record that followed from this perfect storm of circumstances.

This section on the Alpine slide, probably one of the most dangerous amusement park attractions ever, is just perfect:

The sleds themselves were a large factor in the injuries. A stick that was supposed to control speed led, in practice, to just two options on the infrequently maintained vehicles: extremely slow, and a speed described by one former employee as “death awaits.”

Announcement: I’m Joining Automattic

I’m excited to announce that starting today I’ll be working for Automattic, makers of WordPress.com and myriad other web products, as their Director of Platform Services. I’ll be working with a team of talented Automatticians on expanding WordPress.com’s VIP Support and Hosting program specifically.

It’s an exciting time to join. WordPress.com is simply killing it: they we are currently hosting 15.7 million blogs (including the likes of CNN, Time Inc., Dow Jones, and more), and adding about 900,000 more each month. Roughly 500,000 posts and 400,000 comments are published every day. Monthly page views are at 2.3 billion.

On top of the opportunity to work on such compelling products, I’ve been continually impressed with the way the company is run.

And yes, to answer the obvious question, I will be relaunching this blog on WordPress (but only because I want to, not because I have to!)

How to fight IE6

What I usually do is add an extra charge for IE6 compatability. When the clients sees it, they usually drop that requirement. Normally, if you ask them whether it is important to support IE6, they say yes and then it’s your headache. But showing them the price tag seems to work well.

Clever

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Javascript Blacklist

JavaScript Blacklist is a simple extension for Safari 5 which blacklists scripts from a configurable list of domains. If a common “utility” script used by sites that you visit is annoying you, this will let you opt out quickly and easily.

I use it configured with the following domains, to block all sorts of annoying in-text ads, toolbars, and trackers that knucklehead publishers foist on their readers.

  • tynt.com
  • intellitxt.com
  • snap.com
  • meebo.com
  • infolinks.com
  • kontera.com