Maybe like cars with fuel injection etc. Higher rev when cold to be lower when warmed up.
My car has some kind of a throttle reset at ignition on too.
Throttle by wire which means no wire.
It is true that modern systems have a warm-up mode in the tune that raises RPMs for the first few seconds after a cold start up, but they should start to drop within a few seconds. Pretty much everything these days has 'throttle by wire' where the throttle is operated by a servo that is controlled by the ECU/PCM/TPS, the signals from which are transmitted by a wire (or 3). So while it is fun to make fun of English (a language that is a mishmash of other languages) it makes sense in this case.
I miss that on my K6 with very direct flatslide carbs.
I was thinking about that yesterday when riding the '75 750F. The carburetors still function like they should, the only thing I've had to do them is replace the needle jet sets because of wear. At 168,980 miles the bike is on its third set. On the other hand, I am having trouble with the CV carbs on my '90 CBR1000F. The hanging high RPM issue is back after a short absence. I believe the problem is with the 34 year old rubber diaphragms getting old and stiff. The simpler 750 carbs are fine and the newfangled CV carbs are showing their age. The diaphragms are NLA from Honda so I have rolled the dice and ordered some aftermarket ones from feebay. They are supposed to be here today. We will see how it goes, but I have never had any luck with aftermarket carb parts. Seems like to work right the diaphragms will have to have the correct pliability so they work right with the springs and what are the chances of chinese ones being right?