"Basically, our goal is to organize the world's information and to make it universally accessible and useful."--Larry Page
As
Google’s chief executive officer, Larry is responsible for Google’s
day-to-day-operations, as well as leading the company’s product development and
technology strategy. He co-founded Google with Sergey Brin in 1998 while
pursuing a Ph.D. at Stanford University, and was the first CEO until
2001—growing the company to more than 200 employees and profitability. From
2001 to 2011, Larry was president of products.
Larry
holds a bachelor’s degree in engineering from the University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor and a master’s degree in computer science from Stanford University. He is
a member of the National Advisory Committee (NAC) of the University of Michigan
College of Engineering, and together with co-founder Sergey Brin, Larry was
honored with the Marconi Prize in 2004. He is a trustee on the board of the X
PRIZE, and was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 2004.
"To me, this is about preserving history and making it available to everyone"--Sergey Brin
Sergey Brin co-founded Google Inc. in 1998. Today, he
directs special projects. From 2001 to 2011, Sergey served as president of
technology, where he shared responsibility for the company’s day-to-day
operations with Larry Page and Eric Schmidt.
Sergey received a bachelor’s degree with honors in mathematics
and computer science from the University of Maryland at College Park. He is
currently on leave from the Ph.D. program in computer science at Stanford
University, where he received his master’s degree. Sergey is a member of the
National Academy of Engineering and a recipient of a National Science
Foundation Graduate Fellowship.
He has published more than a dozen academic papers,
including Extracting Patterns and Relations from the World Wide Web; Dynamic
Data Mining: A New Architecture for Data with High Dimensionality, which he
published with Larry Page; Scalable Techniques for Mining Casual Structures;
Dynamic Itemset Counting and Implication Rules for Market Basket Data; and
Beyond Market Baskets: Generalizing Association Rules to Correlations.
Sergey Brin and Larry Page invented Google as a special
project when they were students of Ph. D. at Stanford University in January
1996. The primary function of the search engine was to develop an efficient
digital library for the students of the university. The project was funded and
supported by the Graduate Fellowship of the National Science Foundation. To
create the search engine, Page and Brin developed a very useful computer
language known as the PageRank algorithm. Sergey Brin and Larry Page co-founded
Google in 1998, and redefined the way people use the web. Now two of the
world's richest people, they still play an active role in the company,
encouraging fresh approaches to Google's unique culture and its expanding suite
of services.
Like all good genius start-up
stories, Larry Page and Sergey Brin founded Google Inc. in a friend's garage in
Menlo Park, Calif. Since its incorporation on September 4, 1998, the company
has grown to nearly 20,000 full-time employees worldwide, and with a steady
stream of new product developments, acquisitions, and partnerships, has
extended its reach far beyond its modest beginnings as a web search engine.
Perhaps even more impressive is Google's image as the pinnacle of cool, with a
reputation for being hip, innovative and wildly successful--all without
compromising its "Don't be evil" philosophy.
Larry Page's interest in technology
began when his father, the late Carl Page--Michigan State professor and pioneer
in the fields of computer science and artificial intelligence--gave him a
computer at the age of six. Page graduated with honors from the University of
Michigan with a bachelor's degree in engineering and concentration in computer
engineering. He achieved his undergraduate claim to fame by building an inkjet
printer out of Lego blocks.
Page worked for a few years in the
technology industry before deciding, at the age of 24, to pursue a Ph.D. in
computer science at Stanford University. It was there, as a prospective
student, that he met Sergey Brin, who was assigned to show him around the
campus. Brin, originally from Moscow, moved to the U.S. with his family when he
was 6 years old. He received his bachelor's degree in mathematics and computer
science, with honors, from the University of Maryland, where his father taught
mathematics. At Stanford, he was studying ways to extract patterns and
relationships from large amounts of data.
Google's own website implies that
the two disagreed "about most everything" during this first meeting.
But their friendship was given the chance
to blossom in 1996, when Brin joined Page in his BackRub research project,
exploring backlinks--links on other websites that refer back to a given
webpage--as a way to measure the relative importance of a particular site. The
pair then developed the PageRank algorithm (named after Page), hypothesizing
that using this tool, they could produce better results than existing search
engines, which returned rankings based on the number of times a search term
appeared.
They tested the BackRub search
engine later that year on Stanford's servers. Without a web developer, they
kept the search page simple, but were challenged to find enough computing power
to handle queries as the search engine become increasingly popular.
"At Stanford we'd stand on the
loading dock and try to snag computers as they came in," Page said in an
interview with Technology Review in 2000. "We would see who got 20
computers and ask them if they could spare one."
Page and Brin eventually renamed
the search engine Google, as a play on the word "googol," a
mathematical term represented by the numeral one followed by 100 zeros--a
reflection of their mission to organize the seemingly infinite amount of
information on the internet.
Reluctant to leave their studies,
the duo ran the operation out of their dorm rooms. But by mid-1998, Google was
getting 10,000 searches a day; so, finally convinced, they maxed out $15,000
worth of credit cards to purchase a terabyte of disk space and drafted a
business plan.
Things have gone well since then.
In August 2004, Google went public with an IPO that raised $1.67 billion, and
in typical Google fashion, became the first and only company to allocate its
stocks using computers rather than Wall Street bankers. For the quarter ending
June 30, 2008, the company reported revenues of $5.37 billion, an increase of
39 percent compared to the second quarter of 2007.
The famous Googleplex headquarters
in Mountain View, Calif., is also something to boast about. Known for its
relaxed atmosphere and envy-inducing employee perks like subsidized massages,
on-site stylists, and three free gourmet meals a day, the campus currently
spans 2 million square feet of office space, and a recent acquisition will soon
add another 1 million square feet.
Google's "Milestones"
page reads more like a novel than a series of highlights, but there's still
more to come. In a 2005 interview with Financial Times, Brin stated,
"There's a lot of room for improvement, there's no inherent ceiling we're
hitting up on." And so far, that's been the case, from the $1.65 billion
purchase of YouTube down to the continued development of the ubiquitously
popular Google Maps and Picasa photo applications.
To say that Google has had a
tremendous impact on the internet is the definition of understatement. After
all, the company has already found its way into the vernacular--as a verb, no
less. In 2006, the word "google" was added to the Merriam Webster
Dictionary as, "to use the Google search engine to obtain information on
the World Wide Web."
Page and Brin are both on leave
from Stanford, but success has kept them busy. They are still involved in daily
operations at Google as president of products and president of technology,
respectively.
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