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383 points bookstore-romeo | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.623s | source
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dankwizard ◴[] No.42200923[source]
We do this at MyFitnessPal.

When users scan their barcode, the preview window is zoomed in so users think its mostly barcode. We actually get quite a bit more background noise typically of a fridge, supermarket aisle, pantry etc. but it is sent across to us, stored, and trained on.

Within the next year we will have a pretty good idea of the average pantry, fridge, supermarket aisle. Who knows what is next

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onionisafruit ◴[] No.42201114[source]
This post’s replies makes it clear a lot of us don’t recognize humor. Do people really think MyFitnessPal is trying to build a model of the average pantry?
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1. gretch ◴[] No.42201802[source]
The humor isn’t recognized because the humor isn’t there. To be funny there has to be a setup, a punchline, some kinda joke structure. Humor isn’t just saying false things…

Imagine a comedian saying this on stage, how many laughs would that get?

> Do people really think MyFitnessPal is trying to build a model of the average pantry?

We’ve all seen dumber things that are real. Juicero is my personal favorite example.

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2. firtoz ◴[] No.42202240[source]
The humor is attained afterwards when one reads the comments who take it seriously, they become the punchline.

That completes the circuit. It's a nice setup.

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3. phito ◴[] No.42202342[source]
Except we're living in a world where it wouldn't be that surprising, especially after reading this post. Good idea of a joke but bad execution.