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Things You Didn’t Know About Google
There is no other company more synonymous with the internet than Google. As the mother of all search engines (a legitimate title considering Google surpassed Yahoo! as the most visited website in the U.S. in 2008), Google has come a long way since its early beginnings. It is also ranked as the No. 1 company to work for, according to Fortune magazine.
Google spends $72 million a year on employee meals
Seventy-two million dollars a year — that works out to about $7,530 per Googler (a term Google uses to identify employees). While the exact details vary depending on location (the Google empire spans the globe), employees at Google’s California headquarters, aptly entitled the Googleplex, are welcome to at least two free meals a day from 11 different gourmet cafeterias.And that’s certainly not all. Is your car in a bit of a rut? Not to worry; Google offers on-site car washes and oil changes. The list of perks for working at Google is never-ending, making it no surprise that it’s considered the No. 1 place to work, offering: on-site haircuts, full athletic facilities, massage therapists, language classes, drop-off dry cleaning, day cares, and on-site doctors, just to name a few.
Google was originally called BackRub
Like many other booming internet companies, Google has an interesting upbringing, one that is marked by a lowly beginning. Google began as a research project in January 1996 by cofounder Larry Page, a 24-year-old Ph.D. student at Standford University. Page was soon joined by 23-year-old Sergey Brin, another Ph.D. student, forming a duo that seemed destined for failure. Their incessant arguing may have been what spurred the duo to rethink web-searching and develop a novel strategy that ranked websites according to the number of backlinks (i.e., according to the number of web pages that linked back to a web page being searched), and not based on the number of times a specific search term appeared on a given web page, as was the norm. Because of this unique strategy, another thing you didn’t know about Google is that Page and Brin nicknamed the search engine BackRub.Google loses $110 million a year through “I’m Feeling Lucky”
There’s not much to see on Google’s main search page, and perhaps simplicity is one of the keys to Google’s success. When searching Google, you are given two options: “Google Search” or “I’m Feeling Lucky.” By clicking the former, you are given that familiar list of search results; by clicking the latter, however, you are automatically redirected to the first search result, bypassing the search engine’s results page.Photo by Google.
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Angela on June 24th, 2008 2:06 pm
I am suddenly wishing I had a Google job.
Sounds like it’s a good thing BackRub didn’t stick, It’d be interesting to hear people talk about having ‘BackRubbed,” rather than “Googled” something.
Chad on June 24th, 2008 3:40 pm
BackRub? The massage industry would have taken a hard SEO blow.
Balend N on June 24th, 2008 4:49 pm
Google loses $110 million a year through “I’m Feeling Lucky”
I’m sure that’s pocket change for them.
cassy on June 24th, 2008 5:42 pm
Working in the Google is my greatest dream in life.I wish somebody will call me ” GOOGLER”
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