Larry Page was pursuing a PhD at Stanford University in 1998 when he teamed up with classmate Sergey Brin to create a new search engine, which they nicknamed BackRub. They later decided to call it Google, a play on the word “googol”—which is the mathematical term for a 1 followed by a hundred zeros. It signified the enormous volume of information they hoped to eventually make available through their site.
Larry Page was pursuing a PhD at Stanford University in 1998 when he teamed up with classmate Sergey Brin to create a new search engine, which they nicknamed BackRub. They later decided to call it Google, a play on the word “googol”—which is the mathematical term for a 1 followed by a hundred zeros. It signified the enormous volume of information they hoped to eventually make available through their site.