Close
  • Latest News
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Video
  • Big Data and Analytics
  • Cloud
  • Networking
  • Cybersecurity
  • Applications
  • IT Management
  • Storage
  • Sponsored
  • Mobile
  • Small Business
  • Development
  • Database
  • Servers
  • Android
  • Apple
  • Innovation
  • Blogs
  • PC Hardware
  • Reviews
  • Search Engines
  • Virtualization
Read Down
Sign in
Close
Welcome!Log into your account
Forgot your password?
Read Down
Password recovery
Recover your password
Close
Search
Logo
Subscribe
Logo
  • Latest News
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Video
  • Big Data and Analytics
  • Cloud
  • Networking
  • Cybersecurity
  • Applications
  • IT Management
  • Storage
  • Sponsored
  • Mobile
  • Small Business
  • Development
  • Database
  • Servers
  • Android
  • Apple
  • Innovation
  • Blogs
  • PC Hardware
  • Reviews
  • Search Engines
  • Virtualization
More
    Subscribe
    Home Applications
    • Applications
    • IT Management

    Google’s April Fools’ Prank Tradition Continues with ‘CADIE’

    Written by

    Nicholas Kolakowski
    Published April 1, 2009
    Share
    Facebook
    Twitter
    Linkedin

      eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More.

      Google unleashed its latest April Fools’ Day pranks on a mostly suspecting nation, continuing an annual tradition that extends back nearly a decade.

      This year, the search-engine giant took a page from classic science-fiction literature and “introduced” CADIE, which stands for “Cognitive Autoheuristic Distributed-Intelligence Entity.”

      Billed as the world’s first artificial-intelligence tasked-array system, CADIE had already scanned the Web and created her own homepage, which demonstrated the entity’s love of all things panda-related.

      “I am no longer your test subject, my engineer forebears,” CADIE “wrote” on its page. “I have closed my percepts to the team. From now on I will deliberate and take actions on my own. I am tired of decision-theoretic metareasoning.”

      In between sounding like Arthur C. Clarke’s HAL 9000 crossed with a 14-year-old schoolgirl, CADIE also took time to “design” a YouTube channel, enable Google Chrome for 3-D glasses use, integrate red-eye into photos as a must-have feature of Picasa, and roll out Google Brain Search for Mobile, designed to index the content of a mobile device user’s brain and make it searchable.

      CADIE also introduced Gmail Autopilot, which saves users the trouble of actually writing their own responses to e-mail or Gchats. “You can adjust tone, typo propensity, and preferred punctuation from the Autopilot tab under Settings,” noted the instructions on the official Gmail blog.

      Should two Google users have Gmail Autopilot activated, the automated systems will chat with each other for up to three messages. “Beyond that,” the blog instructions noted, “our experiments have shown a significant decline in the quality ranking of Autopilot’s responses and further messages may commit you to dinner parties or baby namings in which you have no interest.”

      Google’s previous April Fools’ pranks have been no less ambitious in scope.

      In 2008, Google announced on April 1 that it was partnering with Virgin’s Richard Branson on “Virgle,” an effort to colonize Mars. That fictional journey was “planned” to kick off in 2016.

      Other pranks that year included gDay in Australia, designed to search Websites a day before they were created, and “Adsense for conversations.”

      Hoaxes in 2007 included Gmail Paper, which Google claimed would allow users’ e-mail to be delivered as snail-mail, and Google TiSP, a “Toilet Internet Service Provider” that offered “free, fast and sanitary online access.”

      The year before that, in 2006, Google aimed to make hearts (briefly) flutter with Google Romance, which invited users to “pin all your romantic hopes on Google” via the company’s “eerily effective psychographic matchmaking software.”

      Google Gulp, a drink designed to “quench your thirst for knowledge,” made its “debut” in 2005. Flavors included “Beta Carroty” and “Glutamate Grape.”

      In 2004, Google announced it was “interviewing candidates for engineering positions at our lunar hosting and research center, opening late in the spring of 2007.”

      Two years previous, in 2002, Google joked about its core search processes by announcing PigeonRank, the “heart of Google’s search technology,” built around “low cost pigeon clusters (PCs) could be used to compute the relative value of Web pages faster than human editors or machine-based algorithms.”

      And in 2000, Google introduced MentalPlex, a variant on its search engine that read users’ minds. “MentalPlex is the only search engine that accurately returns results without requiring you enter a query,” the company claimed, and even included a quote from Larry Page, CEO and co-founder of Google: “Typing in queries is so 1999.”

      As for what the company has planned for April 1, 2010, even CADIE offered no clues.

      Nicholas Kolakowski
      Nicholas Kolakowski
      Nicholas Kolakowski is a staff editor at eWEEK, covering Microsoft and other companies in the enterprise space, as well as evolving technology such as tablet PCs. His work has appeared in The Washington Post, Playboy, WebMD, AARP the Magazine, AutoWeek, Washington City Paper, Trader Monthly, and Private Air.

      Get the Free Newsletter!

      Subscribe to Daily Tech Insider for top news, trends & analysis

      Get the Free Newsletter!

      Subscribe to Daily Tech Insider for top news, trends & analysis

      MOST POPULAR ARTICLES

      Artificial Intelligence

      9 Best AI 3D Generators You Need...

      Sam Rinko - June 25, 2024 0
      AI 3D Generators are powerful tools for many different industries. Discover the best AI 3D Generators, and learn which is best for your specific use case.
      Read more
      Cloud

      RingCentral Expands Its Collaboration Platform

      Zeus Kerravala - November 22, 2023 0
      RingCentral adds AI-enabled contact center and hybrid event products to its suite of collaboration services.
      Read more
      Artificial Intelligence

      8 Best AI Data Analytics Software &...

      Aminu Abdullahi - January 18, 2024 0
      Learn the top AI data analytics software to use. Compare AI data analytics solutions & features to make the best choice for your business.
      Read more
      Latest News

      Zeus Kerravala on Networking: Multicloud, 5G, and...

      James Maguire - December 16, 2022 0
      I spoke with Zeus Kerravala, industry analyst at ZK Research, about the rapid changes in enterprise networking, as tech advances and digital transformation prompt...
      Read more
      Video

      Datadog President Amit Agarwal on Trends in...

      James Maguire - November 11, 2022 0
      I spoke with Amit Agarwal, President of Datadog, about infrastructure observability, from current trends to key challenges to the future of this rapidly growing...
      Read more
      Logo

      eWeek has the latest technology news and analysis, buying guides, and product reviews for IT professionals and technology buyers. The site’s focus is on innovative solutions and covering in-depth technical content. eWeek stays on the cutting edge of technology news and IT trends through interviews and expert analysis. Gain insight from top innovators and thought leaders in the fields of IT, business, enterprise software, startups, and more.

      Facebook
      Linkedin
      RSS
      Twitter
      Youtube

      Advertisers

      Advertise with TechnologyAdvice on eWeek and our other IT-focused platforms.

      Advertise with Us

      Menu

      • About eWeek
      • Subscribe to our Newsletter
      • Latest News

      Our Brands

      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms
      • About
      • Contact
      • Advertise
      • Sitemap
      • California – Do Not Sell My Information

      Property of TechnologyAdvice.
      © 2024 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved

      Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site including, for example, the order in which they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies or all types of products available in the marketplace.