Googleā€™s CEO has promised to clear his plate and immediately address a major beef raised by the companyā€™s Android users, who are complaining that their burger emoji isnā€™t assembled as well as the one from Apple.

Sundar Pichai recently tweeted that he will ā€œdrop everything elseā€ on Monday, to make sure Googleā€™s version of the burger emoji is redesigned to more closely match Appleā€™s, ā€œif folks can agree on the correct way to do this.ā€ He included a retweeted image of the Apple and Google emojis together.

Pichaiā€™s message followed a flurry of activity on Twitter, as Google Android users griped that their burgers simply didnā€™t stack up against Appleā€™s. The Google version stacks the ingredients as follows, top to bottom:

  • lettuce
  • tomato
  • patty
  • cheese

The Apple version stacks things like so:

  • tomato
  • cheese
  • patty
  • lettuce

Note the cheese is directly on top of the patty ā€“ a detail any McDonaldā€™s veteran will tell you allows the cheese to melt a little bit onto the warm meat.

More than a thousand users replied to Pichaiā€™s tweet with comments on how to build a better burger, with the suggesting that neither design is accurate.

ā€œBoth are in the wrong,ā€ wrote user Tero Kuittinen. ā€œObviously, cheese must be on top of meat. But lettuce must be insulated by the tomato.ā€

All official emojis must be reviewed and approved by the , which consists of a number of organizations and individuals working together to standardize computer language. Unicode decides on the general design of the emoji, but it allows companies to come up with the artwork for themselves, which can lead to some variation.

Many other food items also vary greatly from platform to platform. The cake emoji, for instance, is vanilla on Apple and Google devices, but chocolate on Twitter and Facebook.