Khaleej Times

Google looking to future after 20 years of search

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san francisco — Google celebrated its 20th birthday on Monday, marking two decades in which it has grown from simply a better way to explore the internet to a search engine so woven into daily life its name has become a verb.

The company was set to mark its 20th anniversar­y with an event in San Francisco devoted to the future of online search, promising a few surprise announceme­nts.

Larry Page and Sergey Brin were students at Stanford University — known for its location near Silicon Valley — when they came up with a way to efficientl­y index and search the internet.

The duo went beyond simply counting the number of times keywords were used, developing software that took into account factors such as relationsh­ips between webpages to help determine where they should rank in search results.

Google was launched in September 1998 in a garage rented in the Northern California city of Menlo Park. The name is a play on the mathematic­al term “googol,” which refers to the number 1 followed by 100 zeros.

Google reportedly ran for a while on computer servers at Stanford, where a version of the search had been tested. And Silicon Valley leg- end has it that Brin and Page offered to sell the company early on for a million dollars or so, but no deal came together.

Google later moved its headquarte­rs to Mountain View, where it remains.

In August 2004, Google went public on the stock market with shares priced at $85. Shares in the multi-billion-dollar company are now trading above $1,000.

Its early code of conduct included a now-legendary “don’t be evil” clause. Its stated mission is to make the world’s informatio­n available to anyone. The company hit a revenue mother lode with tools that target online ads based on what users reveal and let marketers pay only if people clicked on links in advertisin­g.

It has now launched an array of offerings including Maps, Gmail, the Chrome internet browser, and an Android mobile device operating system that is free to smartphone or tablet makers.

Google also makes premium Pixel smartphone­s to showcase Android, which dominates the market with handsets made by an array of manufactur­ers. Meanwhile, it bought the 18-monthold YouTube video sharing platform in 2006 in a deal valued at $1.65 billion — which seemed astronomic­al at the time but has proven shrewd as entertainm­ent moved online.

The company also began pumping money into an X Lab devoted to technology “moon shots” such as internet-linked glasses, self-driving cars, and using high-altitude balloons to provide internet service in remote locations.

Some of those have evolved into companies, such as the Waymo self-driving car unit. But Google has also seen failures, such as much-maligned Google Glass eyewear. Elsewhere, the Google+ social network launched to compete with Facebook has seen little meaningful traction. In October 2015, corporate restructur­ing saw the creation of parent company Alphabet, making subsidiari­es of Google, Waymo, health sciences unit Verily and other properties.

Google is also now a major player in artificial intelligen­ce, its digital assistant infused into smart speakers and more. Its AI rivals include Amazon, Apple and Microsoft. Despite efforts to diversify its business, Alphabet — which has over 80,000 employees worldwide — still makes most of its money from online ads. Industry tracker eMarketer forecast that Google and Facebook together will capture 57.7 per cent US digital ad revenue this year.

In the second quarter of 2018, Google reported profit of $3.2 billion despite a fine of $5.1 billion (€4.34 billion) w imposed by the European Union.

Google’s rise put it in the crosshairs of regulators, especially in Europe, due to concerns it may be abusing its domination of online search and advertisin­g as well as smartphone operating software.

There have been worries that Alphabet is more interested in making money from people’s data than it is in safeguardi­ng their privacy..

$3.2b Profit reported by Google in Q2 of 2018 despite a fine

 ?? — AP ?? Google co-founders Larry Page, bottom, and Sergey Brin are seen at company headquarte­rs in Mountain View.
— AP Google co-founders Larry Page, bottom, and Sergey Brin are seen at company headquarte­rs in Mountain View.

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