As Paebbels notes, the subject matter of this question would be a pretty spot-on fit for Electrical Engineering.
That said, as Nick Alexeev comments just below, the question as written would also be quickly closed on any SE site, because it's a list question and such questions don't work well on SE.
It might be possible to turn this into a reasonable SE question, but it'd require an all but complete rewrite. Basically, you'd need to get rid of the Big List aspect entirely, and instead focus on what it is that you want to learn from this. A possible starting point would be the last paragraph in your original question, where you do explain some of your motivations for asking it:
As background: it's common knowledge that CPUs are finding their way into more and more systems. What's unknown to me is whether there a places that isn't happening, either due to legacy installations, or even more interestingly, design choices.
OK, that looks like it might be (the seed of) an answerable SE question. Let me tidy it up a bit:
Are there still electronic devices that don't use a CPU?
It's common knowledge that CPUs, microcontrollers and other similar programmable devices are finding their way into more and more systems. Are there any particular places where that isn't happening, either due to legacy installations, or even more interestingly, design choices?
That's starting to look like something that might survive on EE.SE. It's still kind of broad (there surely are plenty of such examples, if you know the subject), but one could presumably write a reasonable answer to it. If you're still curious about this, I'd suggest asking something like that on the appropriate site, and seeing what happens. Worst case, it'll be closed again; best case, you'll get a good answer.
You might want to check that it's not a duplicate first, though.