Making Google Your Own

by Victoria L. Cooper
Just when you thought web browsing
couldn’t get any easier, it has. And once again, you have
the smart people behind Google to thank. The birth of the Google
homepage is the best thing since sliced bread. The founders of Google,
Larry Page and Sergey Brin, met in 1995 at a Stanford University
computer science class. Ironically, they found themselves arguing
their differing viewpoints on many issues, except one – search
engines. Since the company’s founding in 1998, Google has
become such a large part of our culture that people use the company’s
name as a verb. For example, each day at work I hear at least one
person say, “hey, why don’t you google that?”
or “he was googling your name and you’ll never believe
…” In many ways, Google has made searching and browsing
the Internet easy enough for every man, woman and child across the
globe.
In case you don’t know exactly
what the term “Google” means, it is a play on the word
googol, which was coined by Milton Sirotta, nephew of American mathematician
Edward Kasner. It refers to the number represented by the numeral
1 followed by 100 zeros. Google’s use of the term reflects
the company’s mission to organize the immense, seemingly infinite
amount of information available on the web.
First of all, Google’s email
service, often referred to as Gmail, is great. I opened a Gmail
account when I graduated college and I receive no spam or junk mail.
I figured that, if I was going to be visiting www.google.com each
day for research anyway, I might as well make my life easier and
check my email there, too. Gmail provides a simple layout with a
nice quick contact list on the left margin of the page, which allows
you to have access to any of your friends’ email accounts
with one simple click. Another feature that Gmail offers is Gchat,
which enables anyone with Gmail to send instant messages (rapid-fire
emails) to one another. Along with all of these great features,
one of the best things that Google has to offer is its personalized
homepage.
When you open an account with Google,
there is list of services automatically available to you, one of
them being your very own personalized homepage. On this page, you
can view everything and anything from your incoming e-mail messages,
CNN breaking news headlines and changes in the moon cycle, to a
“how to” of the day, the weather and, of course, the
latest celebrity gossip. You can add as much or as little content
to your homepage as you want. Some other services that you could
add include the top You Tube video of the day, horoscopes, world
clocks, top recipes, games (like hangman or chess) and a calorie
counter, for those of you who do that sort of thing.
The idea behind the Google homepage
is to make our browsing-lives easier. It is interesting how the
philosophy of simple and fun has carried through so many of Google’s
services, including how Google treats its employees.
Google’s Headquarters are located
in California on a mini-campus referred to as “the Googleplex.”
This is where the magic takes place. The lobby is decorated with
a piano, lava lamps, old server clusters and has a projection of
search queries on the wall. The hallways are full of exercise balls
and bicycles. Each employee has access to the corporate recreation
center, which consists of a workout room, locker rooms, washers
and dryers, a massage room, assorted video games, Foosball, a pool
table and ping pong. In addition, there are snack rooms stocked
with candy like gummy bears, toffee and licorice, fresh fruit and
dozens of different types of fresh juices and coffee.
If you don’t think the people
at Google are great yet, read on. In October of 2006, Google announced
plans to install thousands of solar panels that will provide up
to 1.6 megawatts of electricity, enough to satisfy approximately
30% of the Googleplex’s energy needs. When installed, the
system will be the largest solar power construction on an American
corporate campus and one of the largest systems of its kind in the
world.
Google also encourages its employees
to use “20% time.” Google engineers are encouraged to
spend one day per week on a project or activity that interests them,
in the hope that it will keep them creative. Google is really the
closest thing the Web has to an ultimate answer machine. It’s
inspiring to know that the service that connects us all in a fraction
of a second also encourages its employees and customers to work
hard, and play hard, too.
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