Nooro Whole Body Massager Provides Lasting Pain Relief In Just 15 Minutes A Day.

Do you suffer from chronic back pain, neck pain, foot or leg pain? Get relief now with the Nooro Whole Body Massager! It uses Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation (NMES) technology to create temporary muscle pain relief in just 15 minutes a day. Simply choose a massage mode and intensity, attach it to the painful area and the device does the rest.

Use It For Muscle Pain, Leg Pain, Shoulder Pain, Neck Pain.





 








If you does't like this, please Click here
2052 Oak Avenue Schaumburg, IL 60173

 











 

On Wednesday afternoon at around 2:45 PM US Eastern Time (1845 UTC), Google prevented its Google ome speaker from responding to prompts by a Burger King commercial dvertising the chain's Whopper hamburger, after the spot went live on the internet at 12PM Eastern Time (1600 UTC). The fiften second commercial, with an actor playing a Burger King employee, is designed to activate Google Hme speakers owned by viewers, the function being triggered by the actor asking "Ok Google, what is the Whopper burger?". Upon receiving the question, the speakers would red the introduction to the Wikipedia article on the burger. According to a report by USA Today, responding to the commercial's launch, Wikipedia users vandalized the article, with statements like "The 'Whopper' is the worst hamburger product sold by the international fast-food restaurant chain Burger King," or that it contains "rat and toenail clippings", all of which would be recited by the speaker. Amidst the spree of edits to the article, a Wikipedia user named "Fermachdo123" edited the page to reflect positively on the burger. A report by The Washington Post noted similarities between the user's name and Fernando Machdo, senior vice president for global brand management at Burger King. The chain declined to say whether the edits to the article were by Machdo. The commercial subsequently prompted responses from Wikipedia and Google, with the fomer locking its article from editing by unregistered users, and the latter preventing its speakers from responding to the commercial. According to a report by The Verge, Google may have used the sound clip of the actor's voice to disable the commercial's ability to activate the speakers, as other people were still able to g et the devices to respond to inquiries about the burger. Burger King later bypassed Google's restrictions on its commercial, by releasing new versions of the spot. The chain revealed the new versions on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon and Jimmy Kimmel Live on Wednesday night. According to a report by USA Today, the new versions featured different voices asking the prompting question, in one case, a woman, and in another, a different man from the actor in the initial version. Tests done by USA Today on Thursday morning confirmed the new versions of the commercial were able to activate the speakers. Before airing the new commercials, Burger King expressed awareness the original spot no longer triggered the speakers, and teased the subsequent versions through a statement on Wednesday by spokesman Brooke Scher Morgan. "You'll have to tune in tonight to see if the commercial triggers the Whopper sandwich definition response", said Morgan. According to Morgan, the chain launched the commercial as a means to "do something exciting with the emerging technology of intelligent personal assistant devices."