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Provides a number of improvements when searching for and working on HITs, including AA time, six-level TO filtering, use of HitScraper blocklist, qualification feasibility tiers, etc.
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Notice: Mount Olympus is a required parallel install to make Athena work. It is not necessary to fiddle with execution order or any other considerations because the Olympus Suite handles this on its own. If you installed Athena and it appears to do nothing, it is likely because Mount Olympus has not been installed (though check the browser's console just in case).
Athena parses all qualifications and assigns them an icon based on their feasibility tier, which is your ability to complete the HIT or become qualified to complete it.
When all qualifications for a HIT have been parsed, Athena assigns the entire HIT a feasibility based on the most important qualification. Using this labeled feasibility, you can filter out HITs that would otherwise waste your time to even look at.
Qualification feasibility and HIT feasibility are based on the same five tiers and icons presented here in the order least to most important, meaning the presence of a qualification further down the list "trumps" any qualification before it to determine the HIT's overall feasibility.
When it appears next to a qualification, that means you possess the qual and its value meets the requester's criteria.
Used as a HIT feasibility, it means that you are qualified to accept the HIT and work on it right now. You are automatically qualified to work on any HIT with no listed qualifications. Here are examples of qualified HITs:


Qualifications with this icon mean that the qual is granted as the result of a test. These are almost always automatically granted following the completion of the test, so you can often quickly and autonomously discover if you can gain the qualification or not.
HITs that are marked "testable" mean that you do not possess some necessary qualifications, but all of them can be tested for. Examples of testable HITs:

A qualification with this icon means that you do not have the qual but you can ask for it from the requester. This seems like a nonissue on the surface, but requested qualifications are almost universally ignored.
HITs marked as requestable means that at least one qual must be requested. An example of a requestable HIT:

Qualifications followed by this icon mean that you have the qualification but its value is does not meet the requester's criteria. These are almost always demographics or quality control values that you cannot change without completing some other HIT(s).
A HIT marked as unqualified means that at least one qualification does not meet the necessary criteria. I personally filter these out because there isn't anything I can do about it looking at the HIT I'm not qualified for. Here's an example of an unqualified HIT:

My favorite type of qualification because it can filter out a ton of time-wasting junk. Qualifications marked impossible are ones that you can never possess, either by a function of your account data (e.g. if you do not meet location quals, since you can't change your account's location), because the criteria are not known (Masters), or because requesting it is universally ignored (Masters, Ibotta).
HITs marked impossible contain at least one impossible qual, which makes even looking at the HIT a huge waste of time. Examples of impossible HITs:

When browsing on Mechanical Turk, you will meet a spiffy new companion just above the list of HITs:

Each of these icons and checkboxes allows you to filter the list of HITs in several ways. Enabling one of these will display the HITs that are categorized as such, and disabling it will hide all of those HITs. Here are the ones you have not already been introduced to:
Blocked HITs.
Highlighted HITs.
Filters HITs based on their average Turkopticon score. Athena uses a unique color for all five points on the scale instead of compacting the top two and bottom two into the same color. From left to right:
Opens the Help window, which contains all of the above information for future reference.
Athena also makes a number of improvements to HIT capsules:

In addition, Athena will also perform these same improvements on capsules when viewing/working on a HIT:

And your queue as well:

You'll notice quickly that the title is color-coded according to the above checkbox scale. The orange background color is the middle of the scale, a 3/5 overall rating. The pay for the task is also highlighted based on the pay rating for this requester, and the red color conveys that this task has bad pay (red being a 2/5 on the TO scale.)
What may be more difficult to notice are the block and highlight icons on the left side of the requester name and HIT title. The asterisk will highlight HITs and the X will block them. Here's a few examples:
This makes 411Richmond a highlighted requester, which means any HITs they post will be highlighted.
CrowdSurf as a blocked requester. This will hide any and all HITs posted by CrowdSurf Support.
Similar to above, though only this single HIT will be highlighted if it appears.
As above, blocks only this one HIT.These block icons work in tandem with the block filter from earlier. Click the X to block a HIT or requester and they will disappear if the block filter is enabled. Thusly, the way to unblock items is to disable the block filter at the top of the page and click the X in the HIT capsule to remove the block for that requester/HIT.
This script replaces and does not play well with:
This script does play well with: