Origin of Name 'Google'.

For a long time I just assumed Google’s name derived from the number one followed by 100 zeros, because it handles so many web pages, get it? But now I am not sure. I recently was looking at the name of that number and apparently it is spelled “googol”, not “google”. So where exactly does the website Google get its name? I’m looking for a story here. And please feel free to provide links too.

Thank you very much in advance to all who reply :slight_smile:

From Google’s corporate overview page:

Didn’t you Google this? :slight_smile:

No chance it came from Barney Google, with the goo goo goo-gly eyes?

Nobody seems to ever mention that in connection with the search engine or the company, and given the age of both the reference (quite old) and the founders (quite young) it sounds like a coincidence.

There’s history, and then there’s history:

If the link doesn’t work for you, search pro.corbis.com for `google seal’.

Well, there may be a connection, albeit indirect. It’s been suggested that Milton Sirotta was influenced by the comic strip character when he coined <i>googol</i>. I doubt if there’s any documentation to support this conjecture – it’s probably just that etymologists seem to dislike ex nihilo coinages and are always looking for where the word “really” came from.

I thought immediately of Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy.

This blog also thinks so:

http://blog.outer-court.com/forum/10023.html

“This word was coined in 1938 by Milton Sirotta, the 9-year-old nephew of American mathematician, Edward Kasner, when Ed asked him for a name for a very large number. The “Google” spelling was taken by the web search engine from “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” (1979) by Douglas Adams, in which one of Deep Thought’s designers asks, “And are you not . . . a greater analyst than the Googleplex Star Thinker in the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity which can calculate the trajectory of every single dust particle throughout a five-week Dangrabad Beta sand blizzard?””