Google - A Bit of History
The first question most people have is, "What the heck is a
"Google?" It is a play on the word "googol," which is the
mathematical figure 1 followed by 100 zeros. Depending on the
level of your love for math, this is either the greatest or
lamest name for a search engine. Regardless, the clever kids at
Google have turned it into a cultural standard.
The Beginning
Larry Page and Sergey Brin co-founded Google in January of 1996,
then known as BackRub. The boys were in the early twenties and
classic computer geeks. Sergey was born in Moscow, alum of the
University of Michigan and visiting Stanford. Larry was assigned
to be his guide. During this visit, they obviously hit it off or
today nobody would give a hoot about linking strategies.
Although two men and the name "BackRub" may raise some
questions, the name actually referred to a method for producing
search engine rankings. Specifically, the BackRub search engine
was designed to analyze the "back links" to a site. Although
BackRub developed a following with those in the know, nothing
much happened for a few years.
1998
As with most new businesses, the boys needed some serious cash.
The brass at Yahoo was interested, but initially passed. Sun
Microsystems, of all companies, provided an answer. Andy
Bechtolsheim was one of the founders of Sun and, thus, had the
necessary deep pockets. $100,000 later, the new search engine
company was on the way to stardom.
A New Name
As legend has it, BackRub became Google for a rather humorous
reason. Apparently, Bechtolsheim accidentally made the $100k
check out to "Google, Inc." You can make your own guess as to
which one of the boys said, "Hey, I have an idea for a new
name." In September of 1998, Google opened a small office in
Menlo Park, California. The rest, as they say, is history.
Today, Google is based in Mountain View, California. Google
prefers email communication, but you can get a live voice by
calling (650) 623-4000. If you really want to talk to them,
refuse a charge from the company on the credit card you use for
Adwords. They will contact you pretty quickly!
The company went public in 2004 [Symbol: GOOG] and has a stock
value of around $360 per share. Larry and Sergey are sickeningly
wealthy. One can assume that Andy Bechtolsheim is also doing all
right.
The Future
In the last year or so, Google has certainly received its fair
share of criticism. PageRank is almost useless in relation to
ranking in search results. At the time of this writing, PageRank
hasn't worked for three days, which means a change, shuffle,
dance or whatever you want to call it is coming.
On the competition front, things are a bit murky. It seems a
week doesn't go by without a patent lawsuit being filed against
the company. MSN and Yahoo have started to raise the level of
competition and more will be coming. Google's reliance on AOL as
a traffic source is also a bit troubling given the continual
loss of market share by the company that nearly brought Time
Warner down. Gmail is dogged by patent issues, not to mention
questions about violations of the privacy of users. All and all,
things are not as rosy compared to a few years ago, but they can
hardly be called bad.
Your guess is as good as mine when it comes to predicting if
Google will become just another search engine. Personally, I
think it will, but not because of any of the above. Instead, the
evolution of the Internet suggests there will be a next "big
thing." Who knows, maybe Google will get a Grub [Grub.org] in
its Nutch [Nutch.org].