I make $1.45 a week and I love it -- Real Users Of Amazon's Mechanical Turk

On Amazon Mechanical Turk, thousands of people are happily being paid pennies to do mind-numbing work. Is it a boon for the bored or a virtual sweatshop?
By Katharine Mieszkowski

A picture of a woman's pink shoe floats on my computer screen. It's a flat, a street version of a ballet shoe. My job is to categorize the shoe based on a list of basic colors: Is it red, blue, pink, purple, white, green, yellow, multicolored? A description next to it reads "Pink Lemonade Leather." This is not exactly a brain-busting task; I'm doing it while talking to a friend on the phone. With the mouse, I check a box marked "pink." In the next split second, a picture of a navy blue shirt appears. I check "blue." Assuming my answers jibe with those of at least two other people being paid to scrutinize the same pictures, I've just earned 4 cents.

With my computer and Internet connection, I have become part of a new global workforce, one of the thousands of anonymous human hands pulling the strings inside of a Web site called Amazon Mechanical Turk. By color-coding the clothing sold by the online retailer, which helps customers to search for, well, pink shoes, I can now call myself a Mechanical Turker. In this new virtual workplace, everything is on a need-to-know basis, including who is doing the work, what the point of the work is and, in some cases, the very identity of the company soliciting the work.


Click thru to the article to read a great overview of this service. I make $1.45 a week and I love it" | Salon Technology

Blogging Articles

Blogging Articles:
"200 Articles for Bloggers

BlogWriters are embracing blogging in greater and greater numbers. It is a great way to get your voice heard and even make a little money. The beauty of blogging is the low initial investment. That means anyone can give it a try. That is also the problem with blogging. There are plenty of people out there who don’t know what they are doing.

If you want to blog well, here is an extensive guide to articles about blogging. If you manage to get through all of these, you might just stand a chance of becoming a successful blogger. Please note, many of these links come from Problogger.net’s recent 31 Days to Building a Better Blog. I sorted them, prettied them up and added more."

Micro Persuasion: 35 Ways You Can Use RSS Today

Micro Persuasion: 35 Ways You Can Use RSS Today

Almost every day I find a completely new way to use RSS feeds that I hadn't seen before. So, with that here are 35 ways you can use RSS feeds today. in most cases, they go beyond news and blogs.

1. Track drunk athletes (RSS)
2. Identify key blog phrases and themes (RSS)
3. Real-time severe weather alerts (RSS)
4. Subscribe to personal reminders
5. See what sports is on HDTV tonight (RSS)
6. Get notified when that must-have item pops up on eBay (RSS)
7. Watch for new music on iTunes (RSS)
8. Monitor for airport delays (RSS)
9. Track new software releases (RSS)
10. Subscribe to movie reviews (RSS)
11. Watch for cheap Travelocity airfares or on Expedia
12. Get the latest currency exchange rates (RSS)
13. Subscribe to traffic updates (RSS)
14. Read the Bible one verse at a time (RSS)
15. Check out new recipes that come to you (RSS)
16. Track your favorite baseball team
17. Track your favorite football team
18. Track your favorite basketball team
19. Track your favorite hockey team
20. Get your horoscope (RSS)
21. Monitor the latest on bird flu (RSS)
22. Assess the latest computer threats (RSS)
23. Track the latest video games for Xbox (RSS) or Playstation (RSS)
24. Get the tides for virtually any coast in the world
25. Read the notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci one day at a time (RSS)
26. Subscribe to TV listings
27. Track the latest questions on Yahoo Answers (RSS)
28. Subscribe to tee times (RSS)
29. Peruse the latest photos on Flickr (RSS)
30. Scan the latest videos on YouTube (RSS)
31. Get hotel deals from Marriott (RSS)
32. Learn a new word every day using RSS (RSS)
33. Track the latest sales with Dealcatcher (RSS)
34. Subscribe to the Target circular (RSS)
35. Track the latest uses for RSS

(Note: CA, Marriott and Expedia are Edelman clients)

11 Ways to Search Without Google

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11 Ways to Search Without Google


SLIDESHOW (11)
Slideshow |
All Shots
As of this writing, Google doesn't own the whole world. But it does have a solid lock on our browsing habits. Want proof? Try typing "good" into the address bar of your browser—did you accidentally type "goog"? Yeah, me too. When a coworker heard I was writing this story, he asked (semi-jokingly) "but if I'm using a different search engine, how will I get Google results back?"


Check out the rest of our
non-Google search picks in our slideshow.

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Google Tip: Wildcards

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Google Tip: Wildcards

Searching is easy when you know—even generally—what you're looking for. But how about when the word you're seeking is right on the tip of your brain, but won't make itself known? Use wildcards!

Substitute an asterisk for exactly one word in a Google search—Pike's Peak is * feet high—and Google will attempt to fill in the blank.

Google can also handle number ranges when searching. Two periods indicate that you're looking for a number between two other numbers. For example, Pike's Peak trail 5000..10000 feet returns trails in the range of 5,000 to 10,000 feet. The number ranges work with currency as well—say, HDTV $500..$900.

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Google Tip: Go Experimental

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Google Tip: Go Experimental

Google Labs is always mixing new stuff in the beaker. At the top of my list right now is Google Experimental (yes, that's experimental within Google Labs), which showcases new search tools including view:map and view:timeline.

Using these modifiers to search on a topic—say, Enlightenment—produces results as pictured.


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14th Annual Utility Superguide

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14th Annual Utility Superguide

Speed! Power! Looks! Fun!

Oddly enough, no one has come up with the perfect PC with the perfect operating system and the perfect applications that make everyone happy all the time. Crazy world.

That's why we turn to utilities, from the little ones that show you the weather forecast and keep you from making common e-mail faux pas to the far bigger ones that search your system at the speed of thought and back up your hard drive. And as the pace of major software development slows—yes, it really has been five years since Windows XP shipped, and three since Microsoft Office 2003 arrived—familiarity begins to breed contempt. Imperfections are magnified, and we search out better ways to get things done.

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Firefox Extension: Morning Coffee

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Firefox Extension: Morning Coffee

Everyone has a daily online routine: checking e-mail in the morning, sports scores after lunch, The Onion on Wednesdays, The New York Times Magazine on Sunday. Morning Coffee, a handy Firefox extension, helps streamline these surfing rituals. With it you can organize which sites you want to check each day and then open them simultaneously in tabs. Future updates might include integration with the bookmark folder and organization by time of day.

To download your jolt of Morning Coffee, go to addons.mozilla.org/firefox/2677.

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Website Grader

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Website Grader
www.websitegrader.com
By Kyle Monson
 
Want to find out how effective your blog or Web site is at snaring all-important search traffic and inbound links? Submit your URL (and your competitors' URLs) to Website Grader, which gives you some basic feedback on how your site is doing and in what areas it can improve. It's a free way to get advice on optimizing your site for search engines, which can drastically boost your traffic. Just enter in the URLs and Website Grader will do a quick (but thorough) analysis.
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InviteShare

clipped from www.pcmag.com
InviteShare
InviteShare
www.inviteshare.com
By Carol Mangis


Don't you hate when the coolest new Web services are by-invitation-only closed betas? For those who aren't on the invite list or aren't friends with A-list bloggers, InviteShare is your ticket in. The free service lets those lucky early beta users share their invites-and the more you share, the more likely you'll be to get the invites you crave. So scoot on over there, help someone else to some of your beta spoils, and grab your ticket to try out Joost, Pownce, or ImInLikeWithYou.
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Top 100 Classic Web Sites

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Top 100 Classic Web Sites

PC Magazine's definitive list of the best that the Internet has to offer in 2007.
Kyle Monson




Every year, the analysts and editors at PC Magazine excavate our browser bookmarks, poll our coworkers and friends, dig deep into the World Wide Web, and put our heads together to come up with PC Magazine's list of the Top 100 Classic Web Sites.

The following is our list of the top classic sites in 2007. You'll see a lot of familiar URLs on this list, and we hope there are also quite a few that you haven't heard of before. But unlike our list of Top 100 Undiscovered Web Sites, these sites are established and generally best-of-breed in their respective categories.


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