Posted in
Main on March 2nd, 2009 by Pingdom
Since it launched in 1998, Google has become one of the true giants of the Internet. These days, Google has data centers all around the world and hundreds of thousands of servers. The sheer size of Google today makes it very interesting to look back at its humble beginnings as a small research project called Backrub at Stanford University.
Back in early 1998, the entire search engine and website ran on this setup:

Closeups and hardware descriptions available here. Note the homemade Lego disk box…
The original Google platform
The original Google platform (Backrub) at Stanford University was written in Java and Python and ran on the following hardware (shown in the pic above):
- Sun Ultra II with dual 200 MHz processors and 256MB of RAM. This was the main machine for the original Backrub system.
- 2 x 300 MHz Dual Pentium II Servers (donated by Intel) with 512MB of RAM and 9 x 9GB hard drives between the two. The main search ran on these.
- F50 IBM RS/6000 (donated by IBM) with 4 processors, 512MB of RAM and 8 x 9GB hard drives.
- Two additional boxes included 3 x 9GB hard drives and 6 x 4GB hard drives respectively (the original storage for Backrub). These were attached to the Sun Ultra II.
- IBM disk expansion box with another 8 x 9GB hard drives (donated by IBM).
- Homemade disk box which contained 10 x 9GB SCSI hard drives.
The Backrub website, and the first try at a Google logo
The Backrub website in 1997 showed the following description of what Backrub was. (Ironically they were having network issues at the specific time of the screen capture we found, see emphasis below.)
BackRub is a “web crawler” which is designed to traverse the web.
Currently we are developing techniques to improve web search engines. We will make various services available as soon as possible.
Sorry, many services are unavailable due to a local network faliure [sic] beyond our control. We are working to fix the problem and hope to be back up soon. 12/4/97
And the Backrub “logo”…? This, apparently, was it:

And here is what must be one of the very first tries at a Google logo, from back in 1997, a year before the actual Google website went live:

History in the making, 12 years ago…
Side note: If you like “tech history”, you might want to check out our post about how nine of the world’s largest tech companies got started, like IBM, Motorola, Nokia, etc.
Want to test your site every minute?
Posted in
Main on November 27th, 2009 by Pingdom
Have you ever wondered how many of Twitter’s users are women? Or men? What about Facebook, MySpace, Digg, LinkedIn, and other sites in the social media sphere?
We have tracked down this information for a number of social network sites (19 of them). All the major ones have been included, like Facebook, MySpace and Twitter and also some of the most popular social news sites; Digg, Reddit and Slashdot.
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Posted in
Main on November 25th, 2009 by Garin Kilpatrick
Wordpress has risen to be a powerhouse on the Internet that now dominates the blogosphere. It was started by the (now) 25-year-old Matt Mullenweg. Last week he was on This Week in Startups with Jason Calacanis. On the show Matt revealed that Wordpress has such a strong presence on the Internet that at least one in three Americans online have visited a Wordpress blog in the last month.
Wordpress lets you use thousands of powerful plugins that complement and extend the platform in a variety of ways. I have scoured the Wordpress Plugin Directory to find the very best plugins to share with you in this post.
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Posted in
Main on November 23rd, 2009 by Devindra Hardawar
Last week Google finally unveiled their much-talked-about Chrome OS, and subsequently worked the tech community into a frenzy. The operating system certainly lived up to Google’s initial promises of being browser-centric – it is basically just the Chrome web browser atop a custom Linux kernel.
Chrome OS is a momentous step towards making the fuzzy concepts of cloud computing more of a distinct reality. What follows are a few reasons why I think it matters, and how it will change the computing landscape by bringing us closer to the cloud than ever before.
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Posted in
Main on November 18th, 2009 by Devindra Hardawar
It used to be that you’d pay a significant price premium for a slim ultraportable laptop – machines that were smaller and lighter than typical 5-6lb laptops. In the days before netbooks, they were really your only option for getting a thin and light laptop. But now that netbooks have carved out a segment of cheap and portable computers in the $200-$500 range, the ultraportables needed to adapt as well.
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Posted in
Main on November 16th, 2009 by Pingdom

Twice a year, the world’s top 500 supercomputers are announced. The most recent winner is the Jaguar which pretty much wiped the floor with the competition, managing a performance benchmark 69% above the IBM Roadrunner which came in second.
Let’s take a closer look at the Jaguar, the fastest supercomputer in the world today.
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Kenroy Rodricks
March 2nd, 2009 at 10:37 am
Interesting to see how Google started and where they have reached today.
Thanks for sharing.
Sudarshan
March 9th, 2009 at 10:47 am
really interesting………
pih
March 23rd, 2009 at 11:25 am
whoa they had 366GB of disk space back then…no wonder they succeeded