SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 3
Download to read offline
11 Things You Might Not Know About Google
Google wasn't always the world's third most valuable brand. Long before it was a go-to verb, it was
an obedient digital dog, merely finding and retrieving stuff, playing fetch for Internet users over and
over again.
Eventually the little G -- which started in 1995 as a Stanford University Ph.D. research project --
grew into the big, $367 billion-dollar G we know and love-hate today. No longer satisfied to fetch
links alone, the global tech colossus now chases meatier, more meaningful bones, like nailing the
fastest Internet speeds on the planet, rendering human drivers obsolete and, NBD, ending death.
Related: Larry Page and Sergey Brin
The Mountain View mammoth's meteoric rise to the top is chock full of juicy trivia tidbits and mind-
blowing milestones along the way.
Here are 11 surprising facts about Google:
1. Sergey Brin and Larry (Lawrence) Page met by chance.
Page, 22 at the time, having recently earned a computer engineering degree from the University of
Michigan, considers attending Stanford University for his Ph.D. Brin, then 21, already a Ph.D.
candidate at the prestigious institution, is assigned to show Page around campus. That was back in
1995 and, as fate would have it, quite the momentous meeting of the minds.
2. Google was originally named BackRub.
In 1996, Page and Brin collaborate on a pioneering " web crawler" concept curiously called
BackRub. Some speculate that the early search engine's nomenclature was a nod to retrieving
backlinks. BackRub, which linked to Brin's and Page's 90s-tastic original homepages, lived on
Stanford's servers for more than a year, but eventually chews up too much bandwidth.
Related: Google CEO: This Is Why Dominant Tech Companies Falter
3. Google is a play on the word "googol."
On Sept. 15, 1997, over the BackRub title, Page and Brin register the domain name of their
mushrooming project as Google, a twist on "googol," a mathematical term represented by the
numeral one followed by 100 zeros. The name hints at the seemingly infinite amount of data the
brainy pair code their fledgling search engine to mine, make sense of and deliver. Many still wonder
if Google is a misspelling of Googol.
4. Google's first doodle was a Burning Man stick figure.
The inaugural doodle was an out-of-the-office message that Page and Brin created in August of 1998
to let people know they'd shipped off to the Burning Man festival. The future billionaires positioned
the iconic Man behind the second "o" in Google's logo. Dude, check it out here.
Related: Lessons From Burning Man on How to Unlock
Creativity and Think Big
5. Google's first office was a rented garage.
So stereotypical Silicon Valley startup, right? Starting
in September 1998, the company's first workspace
was Susan Wojcicki's garage on Santa Margarita Ave.
in Menlo Park, Calif. Wojcicki, sister of 23andMe
founder Anne Wojcicki, is Google employee no. 16. She
was Google's first marketing manager and is now the CEO of YouTube. As for the house that built
Google, the tech titan bought it, because of course it did. Then it filled the suburban ranch-style
dwelling with candy, snacks and lava lamps.
6. A former caterer for The Grateful Dead was Google's first chef.
In 1999, chef Charlie Ayers won a cook-off judged by Google's employees, then only 40 in all, to
clinch the position, which he held for seven years. Ayers initially cooked for the Grateful Dead in
exchange for free admission to their legendary shows, but later took over catering for the jam band.
At Google, he eventually served 4,000 daily lunches and dinners in 10 cafés throughout its Mountain
View, Calif. global headquarters.
Related: Sergey Brin's Best Advice to Marissa Mayer
7. Google New York began at a Starbucks on 86th Street.
In 2000, Google unofficially kicked off its New York arm at a Starbucks in New York City. It was
helmed by a one-person sales "team." Now, thousands of "NYooglers" clock-in at its swanky, 2.9
million-square-foot New York office, a former Port Authority building on 111 Eighth Avenue.
8. Swedish Chef is a language preference in Google search.
Gurndy morn-dee burn-dee, who knew? Yes, it's true. In 2001, Google got in touch with its inner
yodelling Muppet and opened the gates for search queries and results in Swedish Chef lingo (called
Bork Bork Bork, to be technical). Other "joke" languages you can tickle Google's algorithm with
include: Elmer Fudd, Pirate, Klingon, Pig Latin and, of course, Hacker (a.k.a. 1337sp34k).
Related: Get Ready for 'Buy' Buttons in Google Search Results
9. Gmail was launched on April Fool's Day, no joke.
Toying with Silicon Valley's longstanding tradition of pulling April Fool's Day pranks, Google
unveiled Gmail on April 1, 2004, in a wackily-worded announcement that was widely misconstrued
as a hoax. It wasn't Google Gulp. It was a brilliant double fake and the precursor to a Google staple
that now serves millions of users across the world every day.
10. Googlers ride colorful "gBikes" around the Googleplex.
Launched in 2007, Google's Googleplex campus commuter bike program began as a modest fleet of
bright blue Huffys. Then came the goofy "clown bikes." Now Googlers ride more than 1,000 primary-
colored, basket-equipped beach cruisers, dubbed "gBikes," around the two-mile expanse that is
Google Mountain View. Interestingly, none of the bikes have locks. Employees simply "borrow" the
nearest set of wheels. When they're done, they drop them off conveniently close to office entryways
for other Googlers to use.
11. Google negotiated its acquisition of YouTube's at Denny's over mozzarella sticks.
"We didn't want to meet at offices," YouTube co-founder Steven Chen said, "so we were like,
'Where's a place that none of us would go?'" That place turned out to be a Denny's in Palo Alto, Calif.
Mozzarella sticks were nibbled, hands were shaken. The 2006 landmark acquisition was a Grand
Slam for Chen and co-founders Jawed Karim and Chad Hurley. Not bad for the time. Google doled
out $1.65 billion for what would explode into the Internet's most-watched -- and most uploaded-to --
video platform.
Related: Young, Fearless and Fed Up

More Related Content

Viewers also liked

Viewers also liked (13)

Matemática Básica
Matemática Básica Matemática Básica
Matemática Básica
 
Herramientas web 2
Herramientas web 2Herramientas web 2
Herramientas web 2
 
The Melody of Days
The Melody of DaysThe Melody of Days
The Melody of Days
 
Days of Glory
Days of GloryDays of Glory
Days of Glory
 
The Jews
The JewsThe Jews
The Jews
 
Songs of Creation
Songs of CreationSongs of Creation
Songs of Creation
 
Examen_Tsukanka_2C
Examen_Tsukanka_2CExamen_Tsukanka_2C
Examen_Tsukanka_2C
 
Wrt301 thesis
Wrt301 thesisWrt301 thesis
Wrt301 thesis
 
Resume Jacquelyn Rider_Nov_2015
Resume Jacquelyn Rider_Nov_2015Resume Jacquelyn Rider_Nov_2015
Resume Jacquelyn Rider_Nov_2015
 
Velocidad de Reacción- Experimento
Velocidad de Reacción- ExperimentoVelocidad de Reacción- Experimento
Velocidad de Reacción- Experimento
 
Derechos Humanos
Derechos HumanosDerechos Humanos
Derechos Humanos
 
Seminar on JIndal Training
Seminar on JIndal TrainingSeminar on JIndal Training
Seminar on JIndal Training
 
El Respeto
El RespetoEl Respeto
El Respeto
 

Similar to 11 Things You Might Not Know About Google

Interesting facts about google
Interesting facts about googleInteresting facts about google
Interesting facts about googleDipen Parmar
 
Google, by Filippo B.
Google, by Filippo B.Google, by Filippo B.
Google, by Filippo B.Mrs Congedo
 
10 years of Google
10 years of Google10 years of Google
10 years of GoogleTaylaZani
 
History of google
History of googleHistory of google
History of googleDum Free
 
Unknow Facts and top aquisitions of Google
Unknow Facts and top aquisitions of GoogleUnknow Facts and top aquisitions of Google
Unknow Facts and top aquisitions of GoogleMayank Singh
 
Google-Work Culture and Innovation
Google-Work Culture and InnovationGoogle-Work Culture and Innovation
Google-Work Culture and InnovationPrasant Patro
 
Bussiness assignment 11
Bussiness assignment 11Bussiness assignment 11
Bussiness assignment 11JustFun7
 
Google - A presentation by ALSK7
Google - A presentation by ALSK7Google - A presentation by ALSK7
Google - A presentation by ALSK7Sai Krishna
 
History Of Google
History Of Google History Of Google
History Of Google 15sbrazier
 
Larry and Sergey
Larry and SergeyLarry and Sergey
Larry and SergeyAdyns
 
How google works (speech )
How google works (speech )How google works (speech )
How google works (speech )ALI HAIDER
 
Short history of google
Short history of googleShort history of google
Short history of googleSowmya Kurali
 

Similar to 11 Things You Might Not Know About Google (20)

Interesting facts about google
Interesting facts about googleInteresting facts about google
Interesting facts about google
 
Google, by Filippo B.
Google, by Filippo B.Google, by Filippo B.
Google, by Filippo B.
 
Don’T Be Evil
Don’T Be EvilDon’T Be Evil
Don’T Be Evil
 
10 years of Google
10 years of Google10 years of Google
10 years of Google
 
sheela
sheelasheela
sheela
 
The Brand Google
The Brand Google The Brand Google
The Brand Google
 
History of google
History of googleHistory of google
History of google
 
GOOGLE.pdf
GOOGLE.pdfGOOGLE.pdf
GOOGLE.pdf
 
Unknow Facts and top aquisitions of Google
Unknow Facts and top aquisitions of GoogleUnknow Facts and top aquisitions of Google
Unknow Facts and top aquisitions of Google
 
Google brand management
Google brand managementGoogle brand management
Google brand management
 
Google-Work Culture and Innovation
Google-Work Culture and InnovationGoogle-Work Culture and Innovation
Google-Work Culture and Innovation
 
Bussiness assignment 11
Bussiness assignment 11Bussiness assignment 11
Bussiness assignment 11
 
B31 google
B31 googleB31 google
B31 google
 
Google - A presentation by ALSK7
Google - A presentation by ALSK7Google - A presentation by ALSK7
Google - A presentation by ALSK7
 
Google
GoogleGoogle
Google
 
History Of Google
History Of Google History Of Google
History Of Google
 
Larry and Sergey
Larry and SergeyLarry and Sergey
Larry and Sergey
 
How google works (speech )
How google works (speech )How google works (speech )
How google works (speech )
 
About Google(Presentation)
About Google(Presentation)About Google(Presentation)
About Google(Presentation)
 
Short history of google
Short history of googleShort history of google
Short history of google
 

11 Things You Might Not Know About Google

  • 1. 11 Things You Might Not Know About Google Google wasn't always the world's third most valuable brand. Long before it was a go-to verb, it was an obedient digital dog, merely finding and retrieving stuff, playing fetch for Internet users over and over again. Eventually the little G -- which started in 1995 as a Stanford University Ph.D. research project -- grew into the big, $367 billion-dollar G we know and love-hate today. No longer satisfied to fetch links alone, the global tech colossus now chases meatier, more meaningful bones, like nailing the fastest Internet speeds on the planet, rendering human drivers obsolete and, NBD, ending death. Related: Larry Page and Sergey Brin The Mountain View mammoth's meteoric rise to the top is chock full of juicy trivia tidbits and mind- blowing milestones along the way. Here are 11 surprising facts about Google: 1. Sergey Brin and Larry (Lawrence) Page met by chance. Page, 22 at the time, having recently earned a computer engineering degree from the University of Michigan, considers attending Stanford University for his Ph.D. Brin, then 21, already a Ph.D. candidate at the prestigious institution, is assigned to show Page around campus. That was back in 1995 and, as fate would have it, quite the momentous meeting of the minds. 2. Google was originally named BackRub. In 1996, Page and Brin collaborate on a pioneering " web crawler" concept curiously called BackRub. Some speculate that the early search engine's nomenclature was a nod to retrieving backlinks. BackRub, which linked to Brin's and Page's 90s-tastic original homepages, lived on Stanford's servers for more than a year, but eventually chews up too much bandwidth. Related: Google CEO: This Is Why Dominant Tech Companies Falter 3. Google is a play on the word "googol." On Sept. 15, 1997, over the BackRub title, Page and Brin register the domain name of their mushrooming project as Google, a twist on "googol," a mathematical term represented by the numeral one followed by 100 zeros. The name hints at the seemingly infinite amount of data the brainy pair code their fledgling search engine to mine, make sense of and deliver. Many still wonder if Google is a misspelling of Googol. 4. Google's first doodle was a Burning Man stick figure. The inaugural doodle was an out-of-the-office message that Page and Brin created in August of 1998 to let people know they'd shipped off to the Burning Man festival. The future billionaires positioned the iconic Man behind the second "o" in Google's logo. Dude, check it out here.
  • 2. Related: Lessons From Burning Man on How to Unlock Creativity and Think Big 5. Google's first office was a rented garage. So stereotypical Silicon Valley startup, right? Starting in September 1998, the company's first workspace was Susan Wojcicki's garage on Santa Margarita Ave. in Menlo Park, Calif. Wojcicki, sister of 23andMe founder Anne Wojcicki, is Google employee no. 16. She was Google's first marketing manager and is now the CEO of YouTube. As for the house that built Google, the tech titan bought it, because of course it did. Then it filled the suburban ranch-style dwelling with candy, snacks and lava lamps. 6. A former caterer for The Grateful Dead was Google's first chef. In 1999, chef Charlie Ayers won a cook-off judged by Google's employees, then only 40 in all, to clinch the position, which he held for seven years. Ayers initially cooked for the Grateful Dead in exchange for free admission to their legendary shows, but later took over catering for the jam band. At Google, he eventually served 4,000 daily lunches and dinners in 10 cafés throughout its Mountain View, Calif. global headquarters. Related: Sergey Brin's Best Advice to Marissa Mayer 7. Google New York began at a Starbucks on 86th Street. In 2000, Google unofficially kicked off its New York arm at a Starbucks in New York City. It was helmed by a one-person sales "team." Now, thousands of "NYooglers" clock-in at its swanky, 2.9 million-square-foot New York office, a former Port Authority building on 111 Eighth Avenue. 8. Swedish Chef is a language preference in Google search. Gurndy morn-dee burn-dee, who knew? Yes, it's true. In 2001, Google got in touch with its inner yodelling Muppet and opened the gates for search queries and results in Swedish Chef lingo (called Bork Bork Bork, to be technical). Other "joke" languages you can tickle Google's algorithm with include: Elmer Fudd, Pirate, Klingon, Pig Latin and, of course, Hacker (a.k.a. 1337sp34k). Related: Get Ready for 'Buy' Buttons in Google Search Results 9. Gmail was launched on April Fool's Day, no joke. Toying with Silicon Valley's longstanding tradition of pulling April Fool's Day pranks, Google unveiled Gmail on April 1, 2004, in a wackily-worded announcement that was widely misconstrued as a hoax. It wasn't Google Gulp. It was a brilliant double fake and the precursor to a Google staple that now serves millions of users across the world every day.
  • 3. 10. Googlers ride colorful "gBikes" around the Googleplex. Launched in 2007, Google's Googleplex campus commuter bike program began as a modest fleet of bright blue Huffys. Then came the goofy "clown bikes." Now Googlers ride more than 1,000 primary- colored, basket-equipped beach cruisers, dubbed "gBikes," around the two-mile expanse that is Google Mountain View. Interestingly, none of the bikes have locks. Employees simply "borrow" the nearest set of wheels. When they're done, they drop them off conveniently close to office entryways for other Googlers to use. 11. Google negotiated its acquisition of YouTube's at Denny's over mozzarella sticks. "We didn't want to meet at offices," YouTube co-founder Steven Chen said, "so we were like, 'Where's a place that none of us would go?'" That place turned out to be a Denny's in Palo Alto, Calif. Mozzarella sticks were nibbled, hands were shaken. The 2006 landmark acquisition was a Grand Slam for Chen and co-founders Jawed Karim and Chad Hurley. Not bad for the time. Google doled out $1.65 billion for what would explode into the Internet's most-watched -- and most uploaded-to -- video platform. Related: Young, Fearless and Fed Up