This story appeared on Network World at
http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2008/090908bradner.html
Life
at 10 years AG (after Google)
Google was not the first search engine, but its current
status symbolizes the state of the Internet
'Net Insider By Scott Bradner ,
Network World , 09/09/2008
There
were many ways to search the Internet before Google came along, but none of them turned into a
verb. These days, a big deal is being made of Google's turning 10 by a lot of
the media. Most of the coverage has had a bit of an edge to it, as if
people do not want to accept the success that Google has enjoyed.
This
anniversary does provide a good excuse to take a look back at where we came
from. A few years ago, someone asked me what was my biggest surprise in what
the Internet turned out to be, based on what I expected 15 years ago. My answer: Òmom surfing.Ó
Fifteen
years ago the Internet was big -- at least it seemed that way to me at the time
-- but the Web only just had been announced (in April 1993), and was yet to be
seen as anything significant. There were Internet search tools around in 1993,
however. Archie, Gopher and other tools searched and indexed FTP sites but were
used mostly by geeks like me.
The
idea that my mother would want to use such tools -- or have any reason to want
to do so -- never occurred to me. The Web started the change that led to lots
of peopleÕs moms now using this once geek-friendly environment, but it was the
development of search engines that completed the change.
In
1993 there were a few hundred Web sites on the Internet. In two years the
number had grown to tens of thousands, and by the time Google was founded, to
more than 2.5 million. For comparison, there are well over 100 million Internet
Web sites today (according to the usually unreliable numbers). This is about
one-fifth of the number of Internet hosts.
Even
with ÒonlyÓ a few million Web sites, finding things on the 'Net was next to
impossible, so the need for something to index the sites was rather clear. Web
crawlers and search engines started right when the Web did, and there were
quite a few by the time the Google guys announced theirs. I remember using
AltaVista quite a bit -- it seemed like a bit of a wonder at the time. The
wonder is still there, but most people no longer even think about what goes
into providing the instant information-gratification that the Web has become.
makes
Google special? For most people it is not just the ability to search the Web. Yahoo and MSN do that just fine.
(Just for giggles, I searched for myself as people are wont to do, and Google
came up with 122,000 hits; MSN had 153,000, and Yahoo 352,000.) There are a lot
of differences in what comes up on the first screen, but they all work quite
well. It seems to me that what makes Google special is that the company never
sits still. It seems as if new things are announced every day (the day I
submitted this column, it was announced that Google has been indexing old newspapers in a
bigger way). Google is a lot more than search these days.
Regular
readers of this column will know that I do not much like GoogleÕs data-retention
policies (for example, see ÒGoogle: looking good by doing less evilÓ),
although Google has just started to reduce data retention somewhat.
But I do use Google, and it works well. It is also one of the basic reasons
that lots of moms are not only surfing but also finding what they are looking
for -- and much more besides.
Disclaimer:
Harvard knows that if you find only what you look for in an educational
setting, then the setting has failed; but the university has not expressed any
opinion on Google, the verb.
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