When fast food company Burger King attempted to trigger Google Assistant/Google Home by including "OK, Google" in an advertisement, Google moved to block its software from responding. But The Inquirer reports that rogue editors on Wikipedia played a prank on the advertiser:
[...] Burger King forgot that Google draws that kind of information from Wikipedia. And anyone can edit Wikipedia.
Soon, Wikipedia and therefore Google was telling all and sundry that the Whopper was made with "cyanide" "toenail clippings" and "rat meat". It also said that it is "the worst hamburger product" [...]
However, according to The Verge, the restauranteur appears to have inserted its desired text into Wikipedia prior to the broadcast:
For almost a decade, Wikipedia's page for the Whopper began with more or less the same sentence: "The Whopper sandwich is the signature hamburger product sold by the international fast-food restaurant chain Burger King and its Australian franchise Hungry Jack's."
[...]
But last week, that first line — the only line that Google Home reads — was changed to: "The Whopper is a burger, consisting of a flame-grilled patty made with 100 percent beef with no preservatives or fillers, topped with sliced tomatoes, onions, lettuce, pickles, ketchup, and mayonnaise, served on a sesame-seed bun." That certainly sounds like ad copy.
(Score: 2) by Lagg on Sunday April 16 2017, @08:08PM (1 child)
Yeah my badly indicated sarcasm was in reference to that. What do I use then that is socket compatible and doesn't manifest strange behavior when transcoding or something then at this point? :(
http://lagg.me [lagg.me] 🗿
(Score: 2) by kaszz on Sunday April 16 2017, @09:14PM
Have a look at ARM64, like Raspberry-Pi 3 etc. For transcoding perhaps you should try FPGA.
When the release of mr "Snow" in 2013 got public. The Russians started development of their own CPUs and bought typewriters. So that's also a place to start looking into.