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Regular-article-logo Thursday, 15 May 2025

Imagine life without Google!

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The Telegraph Online Published 03.05.04, 12:00 AM

Los Angeles, May 2 (Reuters): So you’ve spent an hour Googling through the Web for your graduate research paper, you’ve played the Google drinking game, heard the Google theme song and vanity-Googled yourself (again).

Just for a change you turn on the TV and find they’re even talking about Google on the Sex and the City and The West Wing.

What the heck was life like before Google?

The last six years have seen Google become not just the world’s most popular Internet search engine but a verb, a household word and a cultural phenomenon.

And on Thursday it entered a whole new chapter when it filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission to become a publicly listed company and sell $2.7 billion in stock.

Google’s the place people turn to in more than 80 languages more than 200 million times a day if they want to locate a long-lost friend, find a recipe for maple walnut mousse pie or research a business competitor on a different continent.

And Google delivers the answers with such ease, without fear or favour, that New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman was moved to ask last year “Is Google God?”

“There are clearly a lot of people who spend a lot of time with it and feel close to it,” said Joe Janes, a University of Washington Information School professor who taught the world’s first university course on Google this spring.

“I don’t think I would go as far as saying people treat it as a friend but it fills a couple of those roles — it helps you find things, it’s always there.

“People now use Google as a verb and Googling people before they go on dates. When it gets to prime time television that’s a sign it has become a cultural phenomenon,” Janes said.

Garrett French, 27, editor of the WebProNews.com online newsletter for Internet professionals, can barely recall life without it.“For as long as I can remember, I’ve been using Google for work and for leisure,” said French.

Information before Google was a tough and often dull business before Stanford graduates Larry Page and Sergey Brin came up with an algorithm that searched and ranked Web pages on the basis of “importance” value to determine their usefulness.

Students trudged to libraries, journalists rifled through dog-eared contacts books and computer neophytes struggled with search engines that required precision spelling, hyphens and slashes in the right order.

But Google — a play on the word googol which means the number one followed by 100 zeros — made Internet searching not just easy but fun.

Whacky logos, tales of life in the Googleplex headquarters where the company chef used to work for the rock band Grateful Dead, the organising principles of “You can be serious without a suit” and“You can make money without doing evil” took the Internet out of geekdom and turned it into something cool.

Sometimes the joke has turned sour. “Google-bombing” was invented by a tech-savvy prankster who last year devised a way of linking the search words “miserable failure” to President George W. Bush’s official biography website.

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