Saturday, November 05, 2005 - Posts

Mechanical Turk

A what? A mechanical Thanksgiving Turkey? Well it’s not a machine nor is it located in Turkey, but a Turk may be able to help you perforce a task. Amazon.com’s new service is a database and could be called an ebay for work, a marketplace for tasks. Sounds intriguing, but has anyone got a success story to tell?

Is this the end of the world of work as we know it? Or is it liberating us by enabling me to live in a monastery in Tibet and earn a very good living doing odd jobs for Fortune 500 corporations?

Get Started now >

  • What is Amazon Mechanical Turk?
  • What problem does Amazon Mechanical Turk solve? Where do people go to learn about submitting work or to completing tasks?
  • How do developers ensure their tasks are completed in a high-quality manner?
  • Who completes the tasks on Amazon Mechanical Turk and how do they complete them?
  • What kind of work can be done using Amazon Mechanical Turk? What is an example?
  • How do Requesters pay for completed tasks?
  • How do people collect money for the tasks they complete?
  • Do people who do work have an Amazon.com account?
  • Can any business use Amazon Mechanical Turk or do they need to understand how to use Web services and APIs?
  • How are Amazon.com and Mechanical Turk related?
  • How does Amazon make money from Amazon Mechanical Turk?
  • Can international Requesters use Amazon Mechanical Turk to get tasks completed?
  • How is Amazon Mechanical Turk related to Amazon Web Services?
  • Why is Amazon Mechanical Turk in beta?
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  • Windows Defender

    Microsoft Windows AntiSpyware is now……”Windows Defender”

    What's in a name?? A lot!! Announcing Windows Defender!

    Every week seems like a big week for us in the engineering team working on our anti-malware technology. However, last week was especially important in a sentimental way. We got the final name for the cool technology our team has been developing for Windows. The name, after long consideration by our product marketing and branding folks, is "Windows Defender"! What's really cool about this name is that it’s more positive than "Windows AntiSpyware". Windows Defender is about what Windows will do for customers, defending them from spyware and other unwanted software. Our solution has really been about more than just the standard definition of "spyware". We’ve always said we will provide visibility and control, as well as protection, detection and removal from other potentially unwanted software, including rootkits, keystroke loggers and more.

    Making the engineering change from "Windows AntiSpyware" to "Windows Defender" took a lot of careful coordination across our team to ensure that the strings in the UI got changed, the help files all got updated, registry keys, file names and properties, as well as a couple of images all got changed. All this work was completed and tested last Thursday, and is currently making its way through our build systems in Windows to make it into the main build environment, where official builds come from. We're pretty excited by the name, and by the sleek new UI and other improvements we've been making in it to help make Windows Vista the best operating system around! But Windows Defender is about a lot more than just a name change. The engine is now moved to a system service, and signatures are delivered over Windows Update. The detection mechanisms have also been radically improved by applying to spyware threats all the great detection technology we use in our antivirus engine.

    As part of this engineering milestone, we've also started to prime the Windows Update software distribution channels with signatures for Windows Defender. This is important so the signatures are available when we ship the next beta. So, for enterprise and corporate customers that are using Windows Server Update Services, you will start seeing "Windows Defender" in the product category dialog as well as a new classification called "Definition Updates". So, now you'll know what that means.

    In addition to the work that my team's been doing to develop this for Windows Vista over the past many months, it will also be available to existing Windows XP users, replacing the current Windows AntiSpyware technology we've been shipping in beta since January. More details on that in a future post. If you're not using our current Windows AntiSpyware beta, please give that a try!

    Dee-Fence! Dee-Fence! Dee-Fence! I've been using Windows AntiSpyware beta since the GIANT days and I have to say it does the job. I had used Spybot and Ad-aware and every week they picked-up lots of junk on my Hard Drive, but Windows Defender is on all the time and updates weekly keeping my PC free from Spyware and Adware. Support newsgroup

     

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