On one of my visits to the Computer History Museum – and by the way this is an absolute must-visit place if you are ever in the San Francisco bay area – I saw an early Google server rack circa 1999 in the exhibits.
Not too fancy, right? Maybe even… a little
Let's look at where stackoverflow.com traffic came from for the year of 2010.
When 88.2% of all traffic for your website comes from a single source, criticizing that single source feels … risky. And perhaps a bit churlish, like looking a gift horse in the mouth, or
I was browsing the sessions at an upcoming Search Conference, which describes itself thusly:
The way to online success is through being easily found in search engines such as Google, Yahoo!, and Microsoft Live Search. While developers have historically thought of search as a marketing activity, technical architecture has now
Google’s user interface minimalism is admirable. But there’s one part of their homepage UI, downloaded millions of times per day, that leaves me scratching my head:
Does anyone actually use the “I'm Feeling Lucky” button? I’ve been an avid Google user since 2000; I use
The Ghost In The Browser: Analysis of Web-based Malware (pdf) describes how Google is leveraging their overwhelming search dominance to combat browser malware installations. In a blog entry last summer, Matt Cutts said:
Given how much I hate web pages that install malicious software or abuse browser security holes, I’
If you’re ever in Silicon Valley, I highly recommend checking out the Computer History Museum. Where else can you see a live demonstration of the only known working PDP-1 in existence, and actually get to play the original Spacewar on it? I did. It was incredible. I got chills.