Google turns 14 today, I love the specific feature about Google as others. As it is celebrating its fourteenth birthday. Lets watch out how it turns from a search engine to verb.
During the 90's there is no big search engine except a few like Altavista.com, msn.com, tripod.com, yahoo.com and etc. Once Google came into the market it took sometime and vanishes the rest of the product and it became the Monopoly for Search Engine. Later it entered in various products and got success in most of them.
1995-1997
1995
·
Larry Page and Sergey Brin meet at Stanford. (Larry, 22, a U
Michigan grad, is considering the school; Sergey, 21, is assigned to show him
around.) According to some accounts, they disagree about almost everything
during this first meeting.
1996
·
Larry and Sergey, now Stanford computer science grad students,
begin collaborating on a search engine called BackRub.
·
BackRub operates on Stanford servers for more than a
year—eventually taking up too much bandwidth to suit the university.
1997
·
Larry and Sergey decide that the BackRub search engine needs a
new name. After some brainstorming, they go withGoogle—a
play on the word “googol,” a mathematical term for the number represented by
the numeral 1 followed by 100 zeros. The use of the term reflects their mission
to organize a seemingly infinite amount of information on the web.
1998
August
·
Sun co-founder Andy Bechtolsheim writes a check for
$100,000 to an entity
that doesn’t exist yet: a company called Google Inc.
September
·
Google sets up workspace in Susan Wojcicki’s garage at 232 Santa
Margarita, Menlo Park.
·
Google files for incorporation in California on September 4.
Shortly thereafter, Larry and Sergey open a bank account in the
newly-established company’s name and deposit Andy Bechtolsheim’s check.
·
Larry and Sergey hire Craig
Silverstein as their
first employee; he’s a fellow computer science grad student at Stanford.
December
·
“PC Magazine” reports that Google “has an uncanny knack for
returning extremely relevant results” and recognizes us as the search engine of
choice in the Top 100 Web Sites for 1998.
1999
February
·
We outgrow our garage office and move to new digs at 165 University
Avenue in Palo Alto
with just eight employees.
April
·
Yoshka,
our first “company” dog,
comes to work with our senior vice president of operations, Urs Hoelzle.
May
·
Omid Kordestani joins to run sales—the first non-engineering
hire.
June
·
Our first press
release announces a
$25 million round from Sequoia Capital and Kleiner Perkins; John Doerr and
Michael Moritz join the board. The release quotes Moritz describing “Googlers”
as ”people who use Google”.
August
·
We move to our first Mountain View location: 2400 E. Bayshore.
Mountain View is a few miles south of Stanford University, and north of the
older towns of Silicon Valley: Sunnyvale, Santa Clara, San Jose.
November
·
Charlie Ayers joins as Google’s first chef. He wins
the job in a cook-off judged by the company’s 40 employees. Previous claim to
fame: catering for the Grateful Dead.
2000
April
·
On April Fools’ Day, we announce the MentalPlex: Google’s ability to read your
mind as you visualize the search results you want. Thus begins our annual foray
in the Silicon Valley tradition of April 1 hoaxes.
May
·
The first 10 language
versions of Google.com are
released: French, German, Italian, Swedish, Finnish, Spanish, Portuguese,
Dutch, Norwegian and Danish.
·
We win our first Webby Awards:
Technical Achievement (voted by judges) and Peoples’ Voice (voted by users).
June
·
We forge a partnership with
Yahoo! to become their
default search provider.
·
We announce the first billion-URL
index and therefore
Google becomes the world’s largest search engine.
September
·
We start offering
search in Chinese,
Japanese and Korean, bringing our total number of supported languages to 15.
October
·
Google AdWords launches with 350 customers. The self-service
ad program promises online activation with a credit card, keyword targeting and
performance feedback.
December
·
Google Toolbar is released.
It’s a browser plug-in that makes it possible to search without visiting the
Google homepage.
2001
January
·
We announce the
hire of Silicon Valley
veteran Wayne Rosing as our first VP of engineering operations.
February
·
Our first public acquisition: Deja.com’s
Usenet Discussion Service, an archive of 500 million Usenet
discussions dating back to 1995. We add search and browse features and launch
it as Google Groups.
March
·
Eric Schmidt is named chairman of the
board of directors.
·
Google.com is available in 26 languages.
April
·
Swedish Chef becomes a language preference.
July
·
Image Search launches, offering
access to 250 million images.
August
·
We open our first international office, in Tokyo.
·
Eric Schmidt becomes our CEO. Larry and
Sergey are named presidents of products and technology, respectively.
October
·
A new partnership with Universo Online (UOL) makes Google the major search
service for millions of Latin Americans.
December
·
Keeping track: Our index size grows to 3
billion web documents.
2002
February
·
Klingon becomes one of 72 language interfaces.
·
The first Google hardware is released:
it’s a yellow box called the Google Search Appliance that businesses can plug into their
computer network to enable search capabilities for their own documents.
·
We release a major overhaul for AdWords, including new cost-per-click
pricing.
April
·
For April Fools’ Day, we announce that pigeons power our search results.
·
We release a set of APIs, enabling developers to query more than
2 billion web documents and program in their favorite environment, including
Java, Perl and Visual Studio.
May
·
We announce a major partnership with AOL to offer Google search and sponsored
links to 34 million customers using CompuServe, Netscape and AOL.com.
·
We release Google Labs, a place to try out beta
technologies fresh from our R&D team.
September
October
·
We open our first Australian office in Sydney.
December
·
You can now search for stuff to buy with Froogle (later called Google Product Search).
2003
January
·
American Dialect Society members vote “google” the “most useful” Word of the Year for 2002.
February
March
·
We announce a new content-targeted
advertising service, enabling publishers large and small to access
Google’s vast network of advertisers. (Weeks later, on April 23, we acquire
Applied Semantics, whose technology bolsters the service named AdSense.)
April
·
We launch Google Grants, our in-kind advertising
program for nonprofit organizations to run in-kind ad campaigns for their
cause.
October
·
Registration opens for programmers to compete for cash prizes
and recognition at our first-ever Code
Jam. Coders can work in Java, C++, C# or VB.NET.
December
·
We launch Google
Print (which later
becomes Google Book Search), indexing small
excerpts from books to appear in search results.
2004
January
February
·
Larry Page is inducted into the National Academy of
Engineering.
·
Our search index hits a new milestone:
6 billion items, including 4.28 billion web pages and 880 million images.
March
·
We move to our new “Googleplex” at 1600
Amphitheatre Parkway in
Mountain View, giving 800+ employees a campus environment.
·
We formalize our enterprise unit with the hire of Dave Girouard
as general manager; reporters begin reporting in April about our vision for the
enterprise search
business.
·
We introduce Google
Local, offering relevant neighborhood business listings, maps and directions.
(Later, Local is combined with Google Maps.)
April
·
For April Fools’ we announce plans to open the Googlunaplex, a new
research facility on the Moon.
May
·
We announce the first winners of the Google Anita Borg Scholarship,
awarded to outstanding women studying computer science. Today these
scholarships are open to students in the U.S., Canada, Australia and Europe.
August
·
Our Initial Public Offering of 19,605,052 shares of Class A common
stock takes place on Wall Street on August 18. Opening price: $85 per share.
September
·
There are more than 100 Google domains (Norway and Kenya are
#102 and #103). The list has since grown to more than 150.
October
·
We formally open our office in
Dublin, Ireland, with 150 multilingual Googlers, a visit from Sergey
and Larry, and recognition from the Deputy Prime Minister of Ireland, Mary
Harney.
·
Google SMS (short message service) launches;
send your text search queries to GOOGLE or 466453 on your mobile device.
·
Larry and Sergey are named Fellows by the Marconi Society, which
recognizes “lasting scientific contributions to human progress in the field of
communications science and the Internet.”
·
We spotlight our new engineering
offices in Bangalore
and Hyderabad, India with a visit from Sergey and Larry.
·
Google Desktop Search is introduced:
You can now search for files and documents stored on your hard drive using
Google technology.
·
We launch the beta version of Google Scholar,
a free service for searching scholarly literature such as peer-reviewed papers,
theses, books, preprints, abstracts and technical reports.
·
We acquire Keyhole,
a digital mapping company whose technology will later become Google Earth.
November
·
Our index of web pages reaches 8
billion.
December
·
We open our Tokyo R&D (research & development) center to
attract the best and brightest among Japanese and other Asian engineers.
·
The Google Print Program (since renamed Google Book
Search) expands through digital scanning
partnerships with the
libraries of Harvard, Stanford, University of Michigan and Oxford as well as
the New York Public Library.
2005
February
·
We hit a milestone in Image Search: 1.1 billion images indexed.
·
Google Maps goes live.
March
·
We launch code.google.com,
a new place for developer-oriented resources, including all of our APIs.
·
Some 14,000 programmers from six countries compete for cash
prizes and recognition at our first coding
competition in India, with top scores going to Ardian Kristanto
Poernomo of Singapore.
·
We acquire Urchin,
a web analytics company whose technology is used to create Google Analytics.
April
·
Our first Google Maps release in Europe is for the U.K.
·
For April Fools’, we announce a magical beverage that makes its imbibers more
intelligent, and therefore better capable of properly using search results.
·
Google Maps now
features satellite views
and directions.
·
Google Local goes mobile,
and includes SMS driving directions.
·
My Search
History launches in Labs, allowing you to view all the
web pages you’ve visited and Google searches you’ve made over time.
·
We release Site Targeting,
an AdWords feature
giving advertisers the ability to better target their ads to specific content
sites.
May
·
We release Blogger Mobile, enabling
bloggers to use their mobile phones to post and send photos to their blogs.
·
Google Scholar adds support for institutional
access: Searchers can now locate journal articles within their own
libraries.
·
Personalized
Homepage (now iGoogle)
is designed for people to customize their own Google homepage with content
modules they choose.
June
·
We hold our first Summer of
Code, a 3-month $2 million program that aims to help computer
science students contribute to open source software development.
·
Google Mobile Web Search is released,
specially formulated for viewing search results on mobile phones.
·
We unveil Google Earth:
a satellite imagery-based mapping service combining 3D buildings and terrain
with mapping capabilities and Google search.
·
We release
Personalized Search in
Labs: over time, your (opt-in) search history will closely reflect your
interests.
·
API for Maps released;
developers can embed Google Maps on many kinds of mapping services and sites.
August
·
Google scores well in the U.S. government’s 2005 machine
translation evaluation. (We’ve done so in subsequent years as well.)
·
We launch Google Talk,
a downloadable Windows application that enables you to talk or IM with friends
quickly and easily, as well as talk using a computer microphone and speaker (no
phone required) for free.
September
·
Overlays in Google Earth illuminate the
devastation wrought by
Hurricane Katrina around New Orleans and the Gulf Coast. Some rescue teams use
these tools to locate stranded victims.
·
DARPA veteran Vint Cerf joins
Google to carry on his
quest for a global open Internet.
·
Dr. Kai-Fu Lee
begins work at our new
Research and Development Center in China.
·
Google Blog Search goes live;
it’s the way to find current and relevant blog postings on particular topics
throughout the enormous blogosphere.
October
·
Feed aficionados rejoice as Google Reader, a feed reader, is introduced at the Web 2.0 conference in San
Francisco.
·
Googlers volunteer to produce the first Mountain View book event
with Malcolm Gladwell, author of “Blink” and “The Tipping Point.” Since then,
the Authors@Google program has hosted more than 480 authors in 12
offices across the U.S., Europe and India.
November
·
We release Google Analytics, formerly known as
Urchin, for measuring the impact of websites and marketing campaigns.
·
We announce the opening of our first offices in
São Paulo and Mexico City.
December
·
Google Transit launches in Labs. People in the Portland,
Oregon metro area can now plan their trips on public transportation at one
site.
·
Gmail for mobile launches in the United States.
2006
January
·
Our first Code Jam
in China concludes in
Beijing. The winner, graduate student Chuan Xu, is one of more than 13,000
registrants.
·
We announce the acquisition of dMarc, a
digital radio advertising company.
·
Google.cn, a local domain version of Google, goes live in China.
·
We introduce Picasa in 25 more
languages, including Polish, Thai and Vietnamese.
February
·
Eric Schmidt is inducted into the National Academy of
Engineering.
·
Dr. Larry Brilliant becomes the executive
director of Google.org,
our philanthropic arm.
·
Google News for mobile launches.
March
·
We announce the acquisition of
Writely, a web-based word processing application that subsequently
becomes the basis forGoogle Docs.
·
A team working from Mountain View, Bangalore and New York collaborates to create Google Finance, our approach to an
improved search experience for financial information.
April
·
For April Fools’ we unveil a new product, Google Romance: “Dating is a search
problem.”
May
June
·
We announce Picasa Web
Albums, allowing your to upload and share your photos online.
·
The Oxford English Dictionary (OED) adds “Google” as a verb.
·
We announce Google Checkout,
a fast and easy way to pay for online purchases.
·
Gmail, Google News and iGoogle become available on
mobile phones in eight
more languages besides English: French, Italian, German, Spanish, Dutch,
Russian, Chinese and Turkish.
·
Gmail launches in Arabic and
Hebrew, bringing the number of interfaces up to 40.
July
·
At Google Code Jam Europe,
nearly 10,000 programmers from 31 countries compete at Google Dublin for the
top prizes; Tomasz Czajka from Poland wins the final round.
August
·
We launch free citywide
WiFi in Mountain View.
·
More than 100 libraries on 10 campuses of the University of
California join the Google Books Library Project.
·
Star Trek’s 40th Anniversary Convention in Las Vegas features a
Google booth showcasing
tools appropriate for intergalactic use.
·
Apps for Your Domain, a
suite of applications designed for organizations of all sizes, and including
Gmail and Calendar, isreleased.
·
Google Book Search begins offering free PDF downloads of books in the public domain.
September
·
We add an archive search to Google News,
with more than 200 years of historical articles.
·
Featured Content for Google Earth includes overlays from the UN
Environmental Program, Discovery Networks, the Jane Goodall Institute and the
National Park Service.
·
The University Complutense of Madrid becomes the first
Spanish-language library to
join the Google Books Library Project.
October
·
Together with LitCam and UNESCO’s Institute for Lifelong
Learning, we launch the
Literacy Project, offering resources for teachers, literacy groups
and anyone interested in reading promotion.
·
We announce our acquisition of
YouTube.
·
We release web-based applications Docs &
Spreadsheets: Word processor Docs is a reworking of Writely
(acquired in March).
·
Google Custom Search
Engine launches, giving bloggers and website
owners the ability to create a search engine tailored to
their own interests.
·
We acquire JotSpot,
a collaborative wiki platform, which later becomes Google Sites.
November
·
The first nationwide Doodle 4 Google contest in the U.K. takes place with the theme
My Britain. More than 15,000 kids in Britain enter, and 13-year old Katherine
Chisnall is chosen to have her doodle displayed on www.google.co.uk. There have
been Doodle 4 Google contests in several other years and countries since.
December
·
We release Patent Search in the U.S., indexing more than 7
million patents dating
back to 1790.
2007
January
·
We announce a partnership with
China Mobile, the world’s largest mobile telecom carrier, to provide
mobile and Internet search services in China.
February
·
Google Docs & Spreadsheets is available in eleven more languages: French,
Italian, German, Spanish, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Korean,
Turkish, Polish, Dutch, Portuguese (Brazil) and Russian.
·
For Valentine’s Day, we open up Gmail to everyone. (Previously, it was
available by invitation only.)
·
Google Apps Premier Edition launches,
bringing cloud computing to businesses.
·
The Candidates@Google
series kicks off with
Senator Hillary Clinton, the first of several 2008
Presidential candidates, including Senator Barack Obama and Senator
John McCain, to visit the Googleplex.
·
We introduce traffic information to Google Maps for more than 30 cities around the
U.S.
March
·
Our first Latin
American software coding contest ends
with Fábio Dias Moreira of Brazil taking the grand prize. He scored more points
than 5,000 other programmers from all over the continent.
·
We sign
partnerships to give
free access to Google Apps for Education to 70,000 university students in Kenya
and Rwanda.
April
·
This April Fools’ Day is extra busy: not only do we introduce
the Gmail Paper
Archive and TiSP (Toilet Internet Service Provider)—we
lose (and find) a real snake in our New York office!
·
We add eight more
languages to Blogger,
bringing the total to 19.
May
·
In partnership with the Growing Connection, we
plant a vegetable garden in the middle of the Googleplex, the output of which
is incorporated into our café offerings.
·
We move into permanent space in Ann Arbor, Michigan and Governor
Jennifer Granholm helps us celebrate. The office is an AdWords support site.
·
At our Searchology event, we announce new strides taken towards universal search.
Now video, news, books, image and local results are all integrated together in
one search result.
·
Google Hot Trends launches,
listing the current 100 most active queries, showing what people are searching
for at the moment.
·
Street View debuts in Google Maps in
five U.S. cities: New York, San Francisco, Las Vegas, Miami and Denver.
·
On Developer Day, we announce Google Gears (now known just as Gears),
an open source technology for creating offline web applications.
June
·
Google Maps gets prime placement on the original Apple iPhone.
·
YouTube becomes available in nine more domains:
Brazil, France, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Ireland and the
U.K.
·
We announce a partnership with
Salesforce.com, combining that company’s on-demand CRM applications
with AdWords.
·
We unveil several “green” initiatives: RechargeIT, aimed at accelerating the adoption
of plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, the completion of our installation of solar panels at
the Googleplex, in Mountain View, and our intention to be completely carbon-neutral by the end of 2007. We also announce the Climate Savers Computing Initiative,
in collaboration with Intel, Dell and more than 30 other companies.
·
Google Earth Outreach is introduced,
designed to help nonprofit organizations use Google Earth to advocate their causes.
July
·
We announce the acquisition of Postini.
·
The first CNN/YouTube debate takes place between the eight U.S. Democratic Presidential candidates.
(The Republicansget their turn
in November 2007.)
·
Google Finance becomes available for non-U.S. markets for the first
time, in Canada.
·
Google Apps is now available in 28 languages.
August
·
We ask users for their interpretation of how Gmail
travels around the
world, and receive more than 1,100
video responsesfrom more than 65 different countries.
·
To infinity and beyond! Sky launches inside Google Earth,
including layers for constellation information and virtual tours of galaxies.
September
·
AdSense for Mobile is introduced,
giving sites optimized for mobile browsers the ability to host the same ads as
standard websites.
·
Together with the X PRIZE Foundation we announce the Google Lunar X PRIZE, a robotic race to
the Moon for a $30 million prize purse.
·
We add Presently,
a new application for making slide presentations, to Google Docs.
·
Google Reader becomes available in French, Italian, German, Spanish,
Dutch, English (U.K.), Chinese (Traditional and Simplified), Japanese and
Korean.
October
·
We partner with IBM on a supercomputing
initiative so that
students can learn to work at Internet scale on computing challenges.
November
·
We announce OpenSocial,
a set of common APIs for developers to build applications for social networks.
·
Android, the first open
platform for mobile devices, and a collaboration with other
companies in the Open Handset Alliance, is announced. Soon after, we introduce
the $10 million Android Developer Challenge.
·
Google.org announces RE<C, an initiative designed to create
electricity from renewable sources that are cheaper than coal. The initial
focus is on support for solar thermal power and wind power technologies.
December
·
The Queen of England launches The Royal Channel on YouTube. She is the first monarch
to establish a video presence this way.
2008
January
·
Google.org announces five key
initiatives: in addition to the previously-announced RE<C and
RechargeIT, there is a new dedication to solutions that can predict and prevent
crises worldwide, improve public services and fuel the growth of small
enterprises.
·
We bid in the 700
MHz spectrum auction to
ensure that a more open wireless world becomes available to consumers.
February
·
For people searching in Hebrew, Arabic, or other right-to-left
languages, we introduce a
feature aimed at
making searches easier by detecting the direction of a query.
·
Google Sites, a revamp of
the acquisition JotSpot, debuts.
Sites enables you to create collaborative websites with embedded videos,
documents and calendars.
March
·
We finally complete the acquisition deal
for DoubleClick.
·
Together with Yahoo and MySpace, we announce the OpenSocial Foundation, an independent
non-profit group designed to provide transparency and operational guidelines
around the open software tools for social computing.
April
·
We feature 16 April Fools’ jokes from our offices around the
world, including the new airline announced with Sir Richard Branson (Virgle), AdSense for
Conversations, a Manpower Search (China) and the Google Wake-Up
Kit. Bonus foolishness: all viewers linking to YouTube-featured
videos are “Rickrolled.”
·
A new version of Google Earth launches, incorporating Street View
and 12 more languages. At the same time, KML 2.2, which began as the Google
Earth file format, is accepted as an official Open Geospacial
Consortium standard.
·
Google Website Optimizer comes out of beta, expanding from an AdWords-only product. It’s a
free website-testing tool with which site owners can continually test different
combinations of their website content (such as images and text), to see which
ones yield the most sales, sign-ups, leads or other goals.
·
We launch Google Finance
China allowing Chinese
investors to get stock and mutual fund data as a result of this collaboration
between our New York and Shanghai teams.
·
We introduce a collection of 70+ new themes (“skins”) for iGoogle, contributed by
such artists and designers as Dale Chihuly, Oscar de la Renta, Kwon Ki-Soo and Philippe
Starck.
May
·
Following both the Sichuan
earthquake in China
and Cyclone Nargis
in Myanmar (Burma), Google Earth adds new satellite information for
the region(s) to help recovery efforts.
·
Reflecting our commitment to searchers worldwide, Google search
now supports Unicode
5.1.
·
At a developer event, we preview Google FriendConnect, a set of
functions and applications enabling website owners to easily make their sites
social by adding registration, invitations, members gallery, message posting
and reviews, plus applications built by the OpenSocial developer community.
·
With IPv4 addresses (the numbers that computers use to connect
to the Internet) running low, Google search becomes
available over IPv6, a new IP address space large enough to assign
almost three billion networks to every person on the planet. Vint Cerf is a key
proponent of broad and immediate adoption of IPv6.
·
Google Translate adds 10 more
languages (Bulgarian,
Croatian, Czech, Danish, Finnish, Hindi, Norwegian, Polish, Romanian and
Swedish), bringing the total to 23.
·
We release Google Health to the public, allowing people to
safely and securely collect, store and manage their medical records and health
information online.
·
We introduce a series of blog
posts detailing the
many aspects of good search results on the Official Google Blog.
·
California 6th grader Grace Moon wins the U.S. 2008 Doodle 4 Google competition for her doodle “Up In The
Clouds.”
June
·
Real-time stock quotes go live on Google Finance for the first time.
·
With the launch of Google Site Search, site owners can enable
Google-powered searches on their own websites.
·
We launch Gmail
Labs, a set of experimental Gmail features,
including saved searches and different kinds of stars, which let you customize
your Gmail experience.
·
A new version of Maps for Mobile debuts, putting Google Transit
directions on phones in more than 50 cities worldwide.
·
For the first time, Google engineers create the problems for
contestants to solve at the 7th Annual Code Jam competition.
July
·
We provide Street
View for the entire
2008 Tour de France route—the first launch of Street View imagery in Europe.
·
Our first downloadable iPhone app,
featuring My Location and word suggestions for quicker mobile searching, debuts with the launch of the Apple 3G iPhone.
·
We work with the
band Radiohead to make
a music video of their song “House of Cards,” using
only data, and not cameras.
·
Our indexing system for processing links indicates that we now count 1
trillion unique URLs (and
the number of individual web pages out there is growing by several billion
pages per day).
August
·
Street View is available in several cities in Japan and
Australia—the first time it’s appeared outside of North America or Europe.
·
Google Suggest feature arrives on Google.com, helping formulate
queries, reduce spelling errors and reduce keystrokes.
·
Just in time for the U.S. political conventions, we launch a site dedicated to the 2008 U.S. elections, with
news, video and photos as well as tools for teachers and campaigners.
September
·
Word gets out about Chrome a
bit ahead of schedule when the comic book that introduces our new open source
browser is released
earlier than planned on September 1. The browser officially becomes available
for worldwide download a day later.
·
We get involved with the U.S. political process at the presidential
nominating conventions for
the Democratic and Republican parties.
·
We release an upgrade for Picasa,
including new editing tools, a movie maker and easier syncing with the web. At
the same time, Picasa Web Albums is updated with a new feature allowing
you to ”name tag” people in photos.
·
Google News
Archive helps to make
more old newspapers accessible and searchable online by partnering with newspaper publishers to digitize
millions of pages of news archives.
·
T-Mobile announces the G1, the first phone built on the Android
operating system. At the same time, we release a new Android Software Developer
Kit, and the Open Handset Alliance announces its intention to open source the
entire Android platform by the end of 2008. The G1 becomes available for
purchase in October.
·
We launch Transit for the New York metro region, making
public transit information easily available for users of the largest
transportation agency in the U.S.
·
Thanks to all of you, Google celebrates 10 fast-paced years.
October
·
We release the first draft of Clean Energy 2030, a
proposal to wean the U.S. off of coal and oil for electricity use and to reduce
oil use by cars 40 percent by 2030. The plan could generate billions in savings
as well as millions of “green jobs.”
·
We introduce Google Earth for the iPhone and iPod touch,
complete with photos, geo-located Wikipedia articles and the ability to tilt
your phone to view 3D terrain.
·
Googlers in Mountain View build a zip line to travel across the small Permanente
Creek separating a few of our buildings.
November
·
In a vote by 5-0, the FCC formally agrees to open up “white spaces,”
or unused television spectrum, for wireless broadband service. We see this
decision as a clear victory for Internet users and anyone who wants good
wireless communications.
·
After we discover a
correlation between
certain search queries and CDC data on flu symptoms, we release Google Flu Trends, an indicator of flu
activity around the U.S. as much as two weeks earlier than traditional flu
surveillance systems.
·
We announce the availability of the LIFE photo archive in Google Image Search. Only a
fraction of the approximately 10 million photos have ever been seen before.
·
SearchWiki launches,
a way for you to customize your own search experience by re-ranking, deleting,
adding and commenting on search results. Comments can also be read by other
users.
December
·
We invite musicians around the globe to audition
to participate in the YouTube Symphony Orchestra,
the world’s first collaborative online orchestra.
·
Google Friend Connect is available to any webmaster looking to easily
integrate social features into their site.
·
Street View coverage more than
doubles in the United
States, including several states never before seen on Street View (Maine, West
Virginia, North Dakota and South Dakota).
·
We partner with publishers to digitize millions
of magazine articles and make them readily available on Google Book
Search.
2009
January
·
We kick off January with the launch of Picasa for Mac at Macworld.
·
The Vatican launches a YouTube Channel, providing updates from
the Pope and Catholic Church.
·
Together with the New America Foundation’s Open Technology
Institute, the PlanetLab Consortium and academic researchers, we announce Measurement Lab (M-Lab), an open platform that
provides tools to test broadband connections.
February
·
The latest version of Google Earth makes a splash with Ocean, a new
feature that provides a 3D look at the ocean floor and information about one of
the world’s greatest
natural resources.
·
We introduce Google Latitude, a Google Maps for mobile
feature and an iGoogle gadget that lets you share your location with friends
and see the approximate location of people who have decided to share their
location with you.
·
After adding Turkish, Thai, Hungarian, Estonian,
Albanian, Maltese and Galician, Google Translate is capable of automatic translation
between 41 languages, covering 98 percent of the languages read by Internet
users.
·
Our first message on Twitter gets
back to binary: I’m 01100110 01100101 01100101 01101100 01101001 01101110
01100111 00100000 01101100 01110101 01100011 01101011 01111001 00001010. (Hint:
it’s a button on our homepage.)
March
·
We launch a beta test of interest-based
advertising on partner
sites and on YouTube. This kind of tailored advertising lets us show ads more
closely related to what people are searching for, and it gives advertisers an
efficient way to reach those who are most interested in their products or
services.
·
We release Google Voice to existing Grand Central users. The
new application improves the way you use your phone, with features like
voicemail transcription and archive and search of all of your SMS text
messages.
·
We celebrate our San Francisco office’s Gold rating
from the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED (Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design) Green Building Rating System. We see it as a sign that
we’re on track with our approach to building environmentally friendly offices.
·
The White House holds an online town hall to answer
citizens’ questions submitted on Google Moderator.
·
We launch new iGoogle
backdrops inspired by
video games, including classics like “Mario,” “Zelda” and “Donkey Kong.”
·
We announce Google Ventures: a venture capital fund
aimed at using our resources to support innovation and encourage promising new
technology companies.
·
Using our transliteration technology, we build and release a feature in Gmail that makes it easy
to type messages in Indian languages like Hindi or Malayalam.
·
Google Suggest goes local with keyword suggestions for 51
languages in 155 domains.
April
·
Our April Fools’ Day prank this year is CADIE, our “Cognitive
Autoheuristic Distributed-Intelligence Entity” who spends the day taking over
various Google products before self-destructing.
·
We announce an update to search which enables people to get
localized results even if they don’t include a location in their search query.
·
For India’s 15th general election, we launch the Google India
Elections Centre, where people can check to see if they’re
registered to vote, find their polling place, as well as read news and other
information.
·
Over 90 musicians from around the world—including a Spanish
guitarist, a Dutch harpist and a Lithuanian birbyne player—perform in the first-ever YouTube Symphony Orchestra at Carnegie Hall.
·
We rebuild and redesign Google
Labs as well as
release two new Labs: Similar Image search and Google News Timeline. Later in
the month, we introduce Toolbar Labs.
·
We begin to show Google profile
results at the bottom
of U.S. search pages when people search for names, giving people more control
over what others find about them when they search on Google.
·
We release 11 short films about Google Chrome made by Christoph Niemann, Motion
Theory, Steve Mottershead, Go Robot, Open, Default Office, Hunter Gatherer,
Lifelong Friendship Society, SuperFad, Jeff&Paul and Pantograph.
May
·
To clear brush and reduce fire hazard in the fields near our
Mountain View headquarters, we rent some goats from a local company. They help us
trim the grass the low-carbon way!
·
At our second Searchology event, we introduce a few new search
features, including the Search Options panel and rich snippets in
search results.
·
We launch Sky Map for
Android, which uses your Android phone to help you identify stars,
constellations and planets.
·
Christin Engelberth, a sixth grader at Bernard Harris Middle
School in San Antonio, Texas, wins the second U.S. Doodle 4 Google competition with her doodle “A new
beginning.”
·
At our second annual Google I/O
developer conference in
San Francisco, we preview Google Wave,
a new communication and collaboration tool.
June
·
We add a new dashboard to Google Places which gives business owners
information, such as what people searched for to see their listing or how many
times their listing appeared in search results, about how customers find their
businesses in Google Maps.
·
We introduce two new ways to customize your iGoogle page: the iGoogle Showcase,
which lets you see your favorite celebrities’ homepages look like and add
gadgets and more from those pages to your own, and nature themes.
·
Google Squared,
a new experiment in Labs intended for certain kinds of complex search queries,
collects facts from the web and presents them in an organized collection,
similar to a spreadsheet.
·
The Google Translator Toolkit is a new set of
editing tools that
helps people translate and publish work in other languages faster and at a
higher quality. Our automatic translation system also learns from any
corrections.
·
We announce All for Good.
It’s a single search interface for volunteer activities across many major
volunteering sites and organizations that’s developed using App Engine and
Google Base. Many Googlers contributed to the open source project in their 20
percent time.
·
We release a beta version of AdSense for Mobile Applications,
which allows developers to earn revenue by displaying text and image ads in
iPhone and Android applications.
·
Google SMS is a suite of mobile applications that
allows people in Africa to access information—like health and agriculture tips,
news and local weather—using SMS on their mobile phones, and includes a
marketplace application for finding buyers and sellers of goods.
July
·
Both the enterprise and consumer versions of Gmail, Google
Calendar, Google Docs and Google Talk are now out of beta.
·
We announce that we’re developing the Google
Chrome OS, an open source, lightweight operating system initially targeted at
netbooks.
·
We launch Moon in Google Earth on the 40th anniversary
of the moon landing. The tool features lunar imagery, information
about the Apollo landing sites, panoramic images shot by the Apollo astronauts
and narrated tours.
·
The new comics themes for iGoogle range from classic strips like Peanuts
to heroes like Batman to alternative comics from all over the world.
·
We add a search options panel to Google Images,
making it easier to find the types of images you need.
August
·
Any active U.S. service member is invited to sign
up for a Google Voice account, to help them keep in better
touch with family and friends, especially when deployed abroad.
·
We announce a deal to acquire On2
Technologies, a high-quality video compression technology company.
·
New social features
come to iGoogle, including social gaming, media-sharing and to-do
list gadgets as well as an update feed for friends’ activities.
·
Google Insights
for Search is now available in 39
languages around the
world. While we’re at it, we introduce a forecasting feature and an animated
map.
·
We expand the
YouTube Partnership Program to
include individual popular videos, so you can monetize your viral video and
earn revenue even if you aren’t a member of the Partnership Program.
·
We add Afrikaans, Belarusian, Icelandic,
Irish, Macedonian, Malay, Swahili, Welsh and Yiddish to Google Translate,
bringing the total number of supported languages to 51—that’s 2,550 language
pairs!
September
·
We celebrate the
birthday of a product
nearly as old as Google itself: Blogger. More than 300 million people visit the
blogging site every month, and we’re proud that it continues to be a medium for
people around the world to freely express themselves.
·
The search box on our classic homepage gets bigger.
·
FastFlip, an experiment in Google Labs, lets you quickly browse through recent news, headlines and
popular topics like a print magazine, while at the same time offering some of
the benefits of online news, like aggregation and search over many top
publications, personalization and the ability to share content with your
friends.
·
We acquire
reCAPTCHA, a technology company focused on Optical Character
Recognition (OCR)—the process that converts scanned images into plain text.
·
In an effort to create a more open display advertising ecosystem
for everyone, we introduce the DoubleClick Ad
Exchange, a real-time marketplace that helps large online publishers
on one side; and ad networks and agency networks on the other, buy and sell
display advertising space.
·
On the birthday of the “father of science fiction,” we unveil
the truth behind a mysterious series
of doodles in tribute
to H.G. Wells.
·
We introduce Place Pages to
Google Maps: one page that organizes all the relevant information
about a business, point of interest, transit station, neighborhood, landmark or
city—in any part of the world—in one place. Place Pages include rich details,
like photos, videos, a Street View preview, nearby transit, reviews and related
websites.
October
·
We begin a series of posts on the Official Google Blog dedicated
to the latest and greatest in the world of Google search.
·
Flu Trends,
our flu surveillance tool, is now available in 16 additional countries and in 37
languages.
·
We introduce BuildingMaker, a tool for
creating buildings for Google Earth that lets you construct a model of a
building using aerial photos and simple 3D shapes.
·
We announce an agreement with
Twitter to include
their updates in our search results.
·
Social Search,
a new experiment on Google Labs, helps you find relevant public content from
your friends and contacts right in your Google search results.
·
Google Maps
Navigation, our turn-by-turn GPS navigation system, includes 3D
views and voice guidance—and because it’s connected to the Google cloud, it
always includes the newest map data, lets you search by voice or along a route,
and provides live traffic data.
·
A new search feature helps you find
music information on
the web. When you enter the name of a song, artist or album, or even a snippet
of lyrics, your search results will include links to an audio preview of those
songs provided by our music search partners.
November
·
The Google Dashboard provides you with greater
transparency and control over
the data associated with your Google Account.
·
A new series on the Official Google Blog covers what’s new in
Google Apps.
·
We add full-text
legal opinions from
U.S. federal and state district, appellate and supreme courts to Google Scholar.
We think this addition will empower the average citizen by helping everyone
learn more about the laws that govern us all.
·
An experimental
feature in Labs called
Image Swirl builds on new computer vision research to cluster similar images
into representative groups in a fun, exploratory interface.
·
By combining automatic speech recognition (ASR) technology with
the YouTube caption system, we offer automatic
captions in YouTube. Captions can help the deaf and hearing
impaired, enable people around the world to access video content through
machine translation, improve search and enable users to jump to the exact parts
of the videos they’re looking for.
·
A few months after announcing our open source operating system
project, we open-source
the project as Chromium OS in
order to engage with partners, the open source community and developers.
December
·
A new homepage
design shows only our
logo, the search box and the buttons upon first loading, and reveals other
links on the homepage, such as Gmail or Image Search, when the user moves the
mouse.
·
Google Public
DNS is part of our
ongoing effort to make the web faster. A DNS resolver converts easy-to-remember
domain names into unique Internet Protocol (IP) numbers so that computers can
communicate with one another.
·
With our new real-time
search feature, you can see live updates from people on popular
sites like Twitter, as well as news headlines and blog posts published just
seconds before your search—right on the search results page.
·
Just in time for the holidays, we roll out Mac and
Linux versions of Google Chrome, as well as extensions for Chrome in
Windows and Linux (all in beta).
·
Living Stories, developed in partnership with The New York Times and The
Washington Post, is an experimental
format prototype for
presenting online news. (We ended this experiment in February 2010, and
open-sourced the code for anyone to use.)
·
We introduce a few
new features to Google
Toolbar, including an easy way to share any page on the web, shortened by a new
URL shortener (goo.gl).
·
For the first time, YouTube reveals official
Most-Watched lists and
some of its fastest-rising search terms for the past year.
2010
January
·
We introduce Nexus
One, an exemplar of what’s possible on mobile devices through
Android, as well as a Google-hosted web store aimed at providing people with an
easier way to buy a mobile phone.
·
Now, you can upload all file
types, including large graphics files, RAW photos, ZIP archives and
more to the cloud throughGoogle Docs,
giving you one place where you can upload and access your key files online.
·
We state our new approach to business in China: Google will no
longer censor search results on Google.cn, and we will work to determine how we
might operate an unfiltered search engine within the law, if possible.
·
On International Data Privacy Day, we publish our
privacy principles. We’ve always operated under these principles,
but now codify them to share our thinking as we create new technologies.
February
·
The first-ever Google Super Bowl ad tells a love story through search terms. This is one of many videos made to celebrate the human quests
behind search.
·
In time for the Winter Games in Vancouver, we introduce Street View
imagery of Whistler
Blackcomb Mountains, gathered with a special camera-equipped snowmobile.
·
Google Buzz is a new way to start conversations about things
you find interesting—like photos, videos, webpages or whatever might be on your
mind—built into Gmail and for mobile.
·
We introduce Safety
Mode in YouTube, an opt-in setting to help screen out potentially
objectionable content that you may prefer not to see or don’t want others in
your family to stumble across while enjoying YouTube.
·
We announce a plan to build and test
ultra high-speed broadband networks, delivering Internet speeds more
than 100 times faster than what most Americans have access to today, in a small
number of trial locations across the United States.
·
We acquire Aardvark,
a company that lets you quickly and easily tap into the knowledge and
experience of your friends and extended network of contacts.
·
The next generation
of ad-serving technology for
online publishers, DoubleClick for
Publishers and DFP Small Business,
combines Google’s technology and infrastructure with DoubleClick’s display
advertising and ad serving experience.
March
·
We acquire Picnik,
a site enabling you to edit your photos in the cloud, without leaving your
browser.
·
Stars in search is a new feature that makes it easier
for you to mark and rediscover your favorite web content.
·
The Google Apps Marketplace is a new online store for integrated business applications
that allows Google Apps customers to easily discover, deploy and manage cloud
applications that integrate with Google Apps.
·
Bike directions
and bike trail data come
to Google Maps.
·
Following the January announcement about search in China, we stop censoring
our search services–Google Search, Google News and Google Images–on
Google.cn, instead redirecting users from Google.cn to Google.com.hk.
April
·
For April Fools’ Day, we change our name
to Topeka. The change is a tribute to Topeka, Kansas, which changed
its name to Google as part of an effort to bring our experimental
fiber network to that
city.
·
Scientists announce a significant new hominid
fossil discovery, made with help from Google Earth,
in the Cradle of Humankind World Heritage Site in South Africa.
·
New features for real-time search include the ability to search the
archive of public tweets and
“replay” the conversation from a particular moment in time, as well as a tool called Google Follow Finder that helps
you find new people to follow.
·
Google Places (formerly the Local Business Center)
gets a new name along with some new features, like showing service areas and,
in some cities, the ability to use an easy advertising program called Tags.
·
We launch a Government Requests tool to give people information about the
requests for user data or content removal we receive from government agencies
around the world.
·
With Earth view in
Google Maps, you can explore Google Earth’s detailed 3D imagery and
terrain directly in Google Maps, on your browser.
·
Oregon becomes the first state to open up Google Apps for
Education to public
schools throughout the state.
May
·
As part of our efforts to accelerate the deployment of renewable
energy, we make our first direct
investment in a
utility-scale renewable energy project.
·
In response to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of
Mexico, we provide Google Earth
imagery of the spill’s spread.
·
We roll out a refreshed look for our search results, with a new,
contextual left-hand panel that highlights the most relevant search tools and
refinements for your query.
·
A team of Googlers in London create a photomosaic of the Google logo. (Later, this
project becomes the inspiration for acompany contest.)
·
At Google I/O, we announce Google
TV, which is built on Android and Chrome and gives you an easy and
fast way to navigate to television channels, websites, apps, shows and movies.
We’re busy at I/O this year, with a handful of other announcements and updates.
·
In celebration of PAC-MAN’s 30th birthday, we release our first-ever
playable doodle, complete with all 256 levels and Ms. PAC-MAN. It’s
so popular we soon give it a permanent home.
·
You have the option to search more
securely with
SSL-encrypted Google web search.
·
We release a report on our economic impact in the United
States: in 2009, we generated a total of $54 billion of economic activity for
American businesses, website publishers and non-profits.
·
The 2010 Doodle 4
Google winner in the
U.S. is third grader Mackenzie Melton, for her doodle “Rainforest Habitat.”
·
We officially
acquire AdMob, a
mobile display advertising company.
June
·
You can now personalize your Google.com with a background
image.
·
With help from the Marin Bee Company, we install the Hiveplex–four
bee hives painted in Google’s colors, situated in a flowered area on our
campus. We have our first honey
harvest later in the
year.
·
We collaborate with the Guggenheim Museum on a global
online initiative, called YouTube Play: A Biennal of Creative Video,
to discover the most creative video in the world.
·
We catch football fever, offering ways for fans to stay on top of the 2010
World Cup as well as a lot of thorough analysis ofsoccer search trends.
·
Caffeine,
our new indexing system, provides 50 percent fresher results for web searches
than our last index, and is the largest collection of web content we’ve
offered.
·
Google Voice is now available to anyone in the U.S.
·
We stop redirecting
Chinese users from
Google.cn to Google.com.hk. Instead, we provide a landing page where users can
use Google.cn services that we can provide without filtering, and/or click
through to Google.com.hk for search.
·
The Google News homepage is redesigned to make your view of news more
relevant and easier for you to share interesting stories.
July
·
We sign an agreement to acquire ITA,
a software company specializing in organizing airline data, including flight
times, availability and prices.
·
“Life in a Day” is a cinematic
experiment to document
one day, as seen through the eyes of people around the world.
·
We acquire Metaweb, a company that maintains an
open database of things in the world.
·
We announce an agreement to purchase the clean energy from 114
megawatts of wind generation at the NextEra Energy Resources Story County II
facility in Iowa.
·
Google Images gets a new look,
designed to make it easier for you to take advantage of some of the powerful
technology behind Images.
·
Google Apps for
Government, our newest edition of Google Apps, includes the same
Google applications offered to businesses and everyday users, with specific
measures to address the policy and security needs of the public sector.
August
·
We will not
continue to develop
Google Wave as a standalone product.
·
We acquire Slide,
a social technology company with an extensive history of building new ways for
people to connect with others across numerous platforms online.
·
With Verizon, we announce a joint policy proposal for an open
Internet.
·
Voice Actions
for Android are a
series of voice commands that let you control your phone just by speaking.
·
If you’re in the U.S., you can now call any phone directly from Gmail.
·
Realtime Search gets a new standalone
homepage, along with more tools for exploring and refining real-time
results.
·
“The Wilderness
Downtown” is a musical
experience created by
writer/director Chris Milk with the band Arcade Fire and Google,
built with Google Chrome in mind using HTML5 and other technologies.
·
Priority Inbox,
an experimental way of handling information overload in Gmail, automatically
sorts your email by importance, using a variety of signals.
September
·
We celebrate Google
Chrome’s second birthday with
a new release of the browser that’s three times faster than the original beta.
·
Google Instant predicts what you’re interested in and
shows you search results as you type so you can quickly get to the
information you’re looking for.
·
Our new Family Safety Center is a one-stop shop with info for
parents and teachers on how to keep kids safe online.
·
A new online Transparency Report gives people tools to see where governments are demanding
that we remove content and where Google services are being blocked.
·
Google News turns eight.
·
We announce the
five winners of Project 10^100.
·
We celebrate the
50th anniversary of
“The Flintstones” with a Google doodle.
·
Brazil, Ireland and Antarctica imagery comes to Street View.
Now, three years after we first launched Street View in five U.S. cities, you
can explore all
seven continents at
eye level!
October
·
YouTube and Yoko
Ono salute John Lennon on what would have been his 70th
birthday.
·
Self-driving
cars! Our experimental technology logs more than 140,000 miles.
·
We invest in the Atlantic Wind
Connection (AWC)
backbone, which provides enough renewable wind energy to serve approximately
1.9 million households.
·
Google Apps for Education hits the 10 million user mark.
·
We give $5 million in
grants to non-profit
organizations that are working to develop new approaches to journalism in the
digital age.
·
Place Search is a new kind of
local search result organized
around places, enabling you to find what you’re looking for nearby.
November
·
Now you can know what you’re getting before you click with Google Instant Previews,
which shows you a snapshot of each search result.
·
Google Voice debuts on the iPhone,
and Google Instant comes to most smartphones.
·
With Boutiques.com, fashion-savvy shoppers can
create their own online boutiques or browse boutiques curated by celebs,
stylists and designers.
·
3D trees arrive on Google Earth.
·
Mobile editing comes to Google Docs.
·
35 hours of
video are uploaded to YouTube every minute.
·
Hotpot, a local recommendation engine powered by you and your
friends, is launched.
In 2011, it becomes part of Google Places.
December
·
Google doodles
migrate to your
smartphone.
·
With the Google eBookstore, bibliophiles everywhere
can browse and search through more than 3
million ebooks, including hundreds of thousands for sale.
·
Gingerbread is the latest and fastest version of
the Android platform.
·
The Google Books Ngram Viewer graphs and
compares words and
phrases over time, showing how their usage has waxed and waned over the years.
·
In 2010, we contributed $184 million to
charitable organizations, including Google Grants,
Google.org tech projects and product support for non-profits.
·
With more than 120 million Chrome users (up from 40 million in 2009), we open
the Chrome Web Store for business, and introduce a pilot
program for Chrome OS notebooks.
2011
January
·
We announce that co-founder Larry Page will
become CEO in April
2011. Eric Schmidt will be Executive Chairman.
·
The first episode of the YouTube World View speaker series airs with President Obama answering citizen questions following
his State of the Union address.
·
In the midst of protests in Egypt, we introduce a service called Speak to Tweet: Dial a phone number, leave
your tweet as a voicemail and we’ll publish it for you—meaning anyone can have
a voice, even without an Internet connection.
February
·
The Google Art Project lets you virtually tour
17 of the world’s best museums and
explore high res images of more than 1,000 works of art.
·
google.com/weddings debuts with custom templates for Sites and
Docs so you can organize all the info you need to plan your nuptials.
·
Google One Pass lets publishers set
their own prices and terms for
their digital content, while we handle payment technology with Google Checkout.
·
Google Social
Search is now more
comprehensive, and social results from people you care about are mixed in with
your results based on relevance.
·
A new search
algorithm that affects
11.8% of our queries makes further improvements in search results.
March
·
Gridlock begone: Google Maps Navigation now routes you
around traffic, so you can spend more time doing and less time
waiting.
·
Instant Previews come to mobile devices.
·
Following the devastating
earthquake in Japan, our crisis response team and Tokyo office work
overtime to assemble resources to help, including Person Finder and an information page with links to pages where you can
donate.
·
Google for
Nonprofits puts all
our tools for nonprofits under one
umbrella to help
U.S.-based nonprofits make an even bigger difference.
·
The @GoogleTalks team uploads its 1000th video to YouTube.
·
Kansas City, Kansas will be the first community to benefit from
our ultra high-speed
broadband network, aimed at providing Internet access more than 100
times faster than what most Americans have today.
·
The new +1 button lets you publicly give something a
“thumbs up,” helping your friends and contacts find the best stuff when they
search. +1’s also help show you useful recommendations on the topics you’re
interested in, right when you
want them—in your search results.
·
We establish two new Google domains in Iraq and Tunisia.
·
Personalize your search results by blocking certain
unwanted domains from
appearing.
April
·
We’re busy this April Fools’ Day: Gmail motion lets you control Gmail with your body
and a new exercise program,Chromercise,
promises to deliver the fitter fingers you’ve always dreamed of.
·
We commit up to $100 million in AdWords matching funds to the Startup America
Partnership to help
jump-start the economy. This same month, we give $12 million in
grants to museums in
New York, London, California, Chicago and Boston.
·
You can now add your local
knowledge to the map with Google Map Maker for the U.S.
·
Charlie Chaplin’s 122nd birthday is the occasion for our
first-ever live-action
Google Doodle.
·
We invest $168 million in a solar energy
power plant in
California’s Mojave Desert; sign a power purchase agreement forwind energy in
Oklahoma; and invest approximately $100 million in the Shepherds Flat
Wind Farm, anticipated to be the largest wind farm in the world.
·
A Google a Day is a new daily puzzle that can be solved using your
creativity and clever search skills on Google.
·
We acquire airline data organization software company ITA.
·
AdWords advertisers receive free phone
support.
·
The world goes crazy over the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton,
and we’re no exception, airing it live
on YouTube.
May
·
At Google I/O, we focus on Android,
launching Music Beta by Google, and Chrome,
announcing the first Chromebooks for sale.
·
Our latest Chrome
experiment, “3 Dreams of Black,” is a voyage through three dream worlds
set to the collaborative album ROME.
·
Google Transit goes to Washington, D.C.
·
Our U.S. economic impact for the year 2010 is $64 billion.
·
Voters crown seven-year-old Mateo Lopez the U.S. Doodle 4 Google
winner.
·
We invest $157 million in renewable wind
energy via the Alta
Wind Energy center.
·
Happy 6th birthday,
YouTube!
·
We give a sneak preview of Google Wallet, which lets you tap to pay
and use your phone as
your wallet.
June
·
Google Offers beta kicks off in Portland, Ore.
·
The +1 button is released to sites across the entire web,
so you can more easily recommend websites to friends.
·
Schema.org, a collaboration among Google, Bing and Yahoo!,
supports a common vocabulary for structured data markup across the web.
·
Rock on: Our playable doodle in honor of guitar inventor Les Paul
becomes the most popular
Google doodle of all
time.
·
Our corporate electric vehicle
charging infrastructure is
the largest the country.
·
We invest $280 million to help finance solar
installations for
homeowners.
·
We acquire Admeld to help major publishers get the most
out of the rapidly changing and growing display ad landscape.
·
We announce image and voice search on the desktop
as well as Instant Pages, which gets the top search result ready in the
background while you’re choosing which link to click.
·
The Google+ project—real-life sharing,
rethought for the web—launches.
·
All our products start getting a design makeover,
beginning with our homepage.
July
·
Talented young scientists wow the judges at the inaugural Google Science Fair.
·
Mind the gap: London public
transit directions come
to Google Maps.
·
AdWords Express is a faster and simpler way for small
businesses to start
advertising online in
under five minutes.
·
Choreographers Pilobolus and OK Go collaborate with us on All is Not Lost, our
latest Chrome
experiment.
·
2-step
verification is now
available in 40 languages and in more than 150 countries to help people keep
their Google Accounts
secure.
August
·
We agree to acquire Motorola
Mobility.
·
We still love
Lucy, and we celebrate her birthday with a Google doodle.
·
The Street View team goes to the Amazon to capture images of the river,
surrounding forests and adjacent river communities.
·
Music discovery site Magnifier is our latest
complement to Music Beta.
·
You can now +1 a website and choose to share it with
your circles on
Google+.
·
We share highlights from our environmentally friendly transportation, food and building programs.
September
·
Android blasts off for a second time,
rocketing to the International Space Station to help perform tasks like
recording sensor data and capturing video footage.
·
An animated music video doodle honors the birthday of Queen frontman Freddie Mercury.
·
We launch The Big Picture on Google Green to highlight our
environmental impact. We also announce that Gmail andYouTube are far more energy
efficient than
non-cloud email and video solutions.
·
We acquire Zagat and plan to make it a cornerstone of
our local offerings.
·
The Google Wallet app becomes
available on Sprint
Nexus S 4G phones, with more to follow.
·
After a 90-day field trial, the Google+ project moves to open signups.
We also add Search and Hangout features.
·
In partnership with the Israel Museum, we digitize the
ancient Dead Sea Scrolls.
·
A $75 million
investment in Clean
Power Finance brings our total investment amount in clean energy to $850
million.
·
Blogger gets prettier, faster and more
interactive with Dynamic Views.
October
·
Google Earth reaches the one billion
download mark.
·
The YouTube Space
Lab, a new educational channel that invites students to submit ideas
for a science experiment that can be conducted in space, lifts off.
·
The latest version of Google Translate
for Android expands
Conversation Mode, which enables you to translate speech back and forth between
languages, to 14 languages.
·
Presentations in Google Docs gets
a revamp and new features.
·
We incorporate WebGL into Google Maps to
create Google MapsGL,
a maps experience with far richer visuals and animations.
·
With Samsung, we unveil the Galaxy Nexus—the
first phone designed for Android 4.0, a.k.a. Ice Cream Sandwich.
·
Our Street View trike rides the rails to capture the stunning Swiss Alps.
·
The Tunisia Talks channel enables Tunisians to submit questions
to political candidates in advance of the country’slandmark free
elections.
·
More updates come to Google+: Learn what people
are talking about around the platform with “What’s hot,” see how posts get
shared with Ripples and edit photos in Google+ with Creative Kit. Plus, Google+
is now available to Google Apps customers worldwide.
·
We carve a spooktacular
jack-o-lantern homepage doodle for Halloween.
November
·
Our redesign comes to Gmail,
featuring streamlined conversations, new HD themes, smarter navigation and
more.
·
The world’s largest pilgrimage—the Hajj, in Saudi Arabia—is broadcast live on YouTube for
the first time.
·
Google+ Pages for businesses, organizations and
other entities enable you to
connect with all the
things you care about.
·
Google for Veterans
and Families brings together Google products and platforms for
servicemembers and their families.
·
Music beta evolves into a broader platform, Google Music, enabling you to buy, play
and share your favorite tunes, and store your music in the cloud so you can
listen to it anywhere.
·
Street View goes places with special collections.
Take a walk in the park or hit the slopes with a number of new public parks and ski resorts.
·
Gobble, gobble. There’s a create-your-own turkey doodle up on our homepage to celebrate
Thanksgiving in the U.S.
·
Google Maps for
Android reaches a new
frontier: mapping the
indoors.
·
We roll out the next stage in our redesign, a new Google bar that enables you to navigate quickly
among all our services.
December
·
YouTube has a new look,
complete with a redesigned homepage and simpler and customizable Channels.
·
Oui, oui. We open a new
office in Paris—headquarters for all our Southern Europe, Middle
East and Africa operations.
·
Android Market exceeds 10 billion app
downloads—with a growth rate of one billion app downloads per month.
·
360-degree panoramic imagery of those areas in Japan affected by the March 2011 earthquake
is now available through theStreet View feature in Google Maps.
·
Our end-of-year
grants in STEM and
girls’ education, empowerment through technology and anti-slavery and human
trafficking total $40 million.
·
We close out the debut year for Google+ with a few more
improvements: the ability to adjust the volume of your circles,
redesigned notifications, new features for Google+ Pages and a better photo
experience. Google+ Hangouts get some
upgrades, too.
2012
January
·
Google.com/elections is a new one-stop
shop for all U.S.
elections news, trends and online tools.
·
The creator of the Addams Family gets a 100th birthday doodle.
·
Search plus Your
World is the next step
in transforming Google into a search engine that understands not only content,
but also people and relationships.
·
We’re the first major Internet services company to have all of
our U.S. owned and operated data centers receive ISO
14001 and OHSAS 18001 certification, high standards for
environmental management and workforce safety.
·
After the State of the Union, U.S. President Barack
Obama has a Google+ Hangout to
answer questions directly from citizens.
·
Google Earth 6.2 makes search improvements, adds a
Google+ sharing tool and creates a seass globe out of a previous patchwork of
photographs.
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