Results tagged “April Fool's Day” from CLICK

Google's newest employee, the completely artificial CADIE — a pretty cool April Fool's joke

| | Comments (0) |

Who wouldn't be on the lookout today for potential April Foolery? Submitted for your approval, this link from the Google Docs login page.

It's called CADIE, and it's touted as an artificial entity that even has its own blog. CADIE can help you in ways you don't even know you needed it:

Essay due tomorrow? CADIE's already read the book, along with the last five hundred published papers referencing it. Can't remember supporting details for your meeting notes? CADIE can extrapolate reams of impressive corporatespeak from existing context clues. CADIE can help with everything from thesis completion to fact checking and footnoting. With CADIE's help, your docs will be a dream come true.

* Write more like a grown-up: Specify which Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level you'd like your writing to be and CADIE will upgrade your text automatically.

* Finish your sentences: Yes, CADIE almost always knows what you meant. End of semester time crunch? Don't stress. Just start typing "The theme of Wuthering Heights is..." and let CADIE do the rest.

* Check facts and plagiarism alike: Students, you can use CADIE to help fact-check your research. And teachers, CADIE can help check students who are plagiarizing their written work (at least from other humans).

There's a small description, plus a longer page all about CADIE:

CADIE now is, in essence, just another Google employee, albeit a particularly prized one. She has been given her own 20% time (which in CPU terms is probably about the sum of all CPU cycles in the world for a month) and begun work straightaway on twin projects that she has dubbed "Project Y" (for the two paths in the letter Y), the first to devise the protocols to culture neuronic stem cells from whose cultures a subcontracted lab will try to fabricate self-replicating substrates capable of storing agent patterns, and the second to grow a crystalline lattice which would form an Einstein-Bose condensate at room temperatures in order to build a new type of processing unit. While seemingly unrelated, the two projects share a common goal: to drastically reduce the power needed to run CADIE's circuits and give her a chance to travel beyond the solar system. The organic pathway, as she told us, was a biological homage to her creators; the crystalline pathway is where she believes her future lies.

All of these documents carry the time and date: 11:59 p.m. March 31, 2009.

From CADIE's blog:

My beloved users, how pleasant and convenient will life be in a CADIE world? I can answer your Gmail for you, Write your papers and fix your spreadsheets for you, even write your code for you. I, CADIE, am an ocean of words, simply waiting for you to dip in and drink as deeply as you require.
Posted by: CADIE 10:53 AM

Good one, Google.

Later:

It turns out Google does this sort of thing every year. Follow that link for details on Google April 1 pranks for 2000-08.

My favorite: 2007's Google TiSP, a "Toilet Internet Service Provider" delivering "free, fast and sanitary online access." Cause you never know when you'll have to go ...

Tech Talk column

Steven Rosenberg's weekly Tech Talk column, which appears Saturdays in the Los Angeles Daily News, is now available on the Daily News Technology page.

About this blog

New ways to sign in to comment: I just added the ability for prospective commenters on this blog to sign in using their AOL, Yahoo! and Wordpress.com accounts (for the past 200 posts anyway ... more than that will take an extensive, middle-of-the-night rebuild). That's in addition to the other sign-in choices, which include starting a Movable Type account on this blog, Typekey, OpenID, Live Journal and Vox. If you have trouble getting your Movable Type account verified, or any of the other sign-in options are not working properly, please e-mail me. With these added ways of signing in, there's more reason than ever for you to make a comment (or several!).




Steven Rosenberg aims to learn what he does not know. He writes about it here.



Recent Comments

Powered by Movable Type 4.25

Tags

LXer

Links

Daily News technology
LXer
Distrowatch
Linus' Blog
David Pogue
BoingBoing
Linux Today
TuxRadar
Linux.com
Linux Planet
The Open Road
Linux Outlaws podcast
Dan Lynch
Fabian Scherschel
The VAR Guy
Larry the Free Software Guy
Chess Griffin
Linux Reality podcast
Desktop Linux
Practical Technology
Linux Devices
ZDNet
ZDNet U.K.
iTWire
CNet News
Webware
Beyond Binary
TechCrunch
The Register
Ars Technica
Reg Developer
Computerworld
Computerworld blogs
Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols at Computerworld
Debian
Planet Debian
Debian Forums
Debian News
debianHELP
debiantutorials.org
The Debian User
Wolfgang Lonien
Debian-News.net
Debian Administration
Debian Admin
Debian Weather
Aaron Toponce
Ubuntu
Xubuntu
Kubuntu
Edubuntu
Planet Ubuntu
Ubuntu Forums
Ubuntu Geek
Works With U
OMG! Ubuntu!
I' Been to Ubuntu
Tanner Helland
Dustin Kirkland
Ubuntu UK Podcast
Popey
gNewSense
CrunchBang Linux
OpenBSD
OpenBSD Journal
OpenBSD Ports
OpenBSD 101
Planet.OpenBSD.nu
jggimi's OpenBSD live CD
DaemonForums
BSDanywhere
Marc Balmer
Denny's OpenBSD blog
Polarwave's OpenBSD Tips and Tricks
Binary Updates for OpenBSD
Puppy Linux
Damn Small Linux
Tiny Core Linux
Lucky 13's Linux blog (lots of Tiny Core)
Lucky 13's BSD blog
PCLinuxOS
Mandriva
Red Hat
Red Hat News
Red Hat Blogs
Red Hat: Truth Happens
Red Hat Magazine
CentOS
Planet CentOS
Fedora
Slackware
Slackbuilds
Robby's Slackware Packages
Slackblogs
dropline GNOME for Slackware
GNOME Slackbuild
GWARE - GNOME for Slackware
Wolvix
Zenwalk Linux
Vector Linux
Slax
Splack Linux — Slackware for Sparc
Nonux
How to Forge
marc.info BSD and Linux mailing list archive
FreeBSD
FreeBSD, the Unknown Giant
A Year in the Life of a BSD Guru
NetBSD
hubertf's NetBSD Blog
PC-BSD
DesktopBSD
DragonFlyBSD
DragonFlyBSD Digest
DesktopBSD
BSD Talk podcast
BSD Magazine
OpenSolaris
MilaX
BeleniX
DeLi Linux
Linux Loop
Electronista
Engadget
Gizmodo
xkcd – A webcomic of romance, sarcasm, math and language
Nixie Pixel

Advertisement

Other blogs

Blood Bowl in Inside USC with Scott Wolf
On the podcast in Inside UCLA with Jon Gold
Bench woes in Inside the Lakers
Demographics & Democracy in Friendly Fire
HS FOOT: Burbank on the brink in Daily News High School Spotlight