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The first half is an interesting history of search, going back to nearly the origins of the internet, and a brief history of Google through ~2005. Since the book was published in late 2005, it has some of the same issues as "The Facebook Effect"--namely, the company the author is studying is too young to really know who or what within it will have true long-term importance. Obviously the core search product was important at the time, and AdWords, but beyond that it wasn't clear why Google was going to be such an important and valuable company.
There are plenty of examples to highlight: YouTube was only an emergent independent company that gets a 1 paragraph mention in the epilogue; Gmail gets fewer than a handful of references; Google Docs and Drive didn't exist; Maps was still an "X" project known by its pre-acquisition name of Keyhole; Google had just entered China; Android was still a few years away (hadn't yet been acquired when the book went to print); not to mention all the other Google X projects.
It's probably a more interesting book for the way it captures what happened in the search market between 1995-2004, and Google's very early history, than anything about Google as an actual business. AltaVista, Yahoo, and GoTo figure prominently in the book and I think a lot of people forget how contested and uncertain the search market was around 2000.
So: if you're going to read it, read it for its history of the search market through 2004, not because it's particularly insightful about either Google's history, the way Google works and makes strategic decisions, or the people and products that made Google what it is today.
There are plenty of examples to highlight: YouTube was only an emergent independent company that gets a 1 paragraph mention in the epilogue; Gmail gets fewer than a handful of references; Google Docs and Drive didn't exist; Maps was still an "X" project known by its pre-acquisition name of Keyhole; Google had just entered China; Android was still a few years away (hadn't yet been acquired when the book went to print); not to mention all the other Google X projects.
It's probably a more interesting book for the way it captures what happened in the search market between 1995-2004, and Google's very early history, than anything about Google as an actual business. AltaVista, Yahoo, and GoTo figure prominently in the book and I think a lot of people forget how contested and uncertain the search market was around 2000.
So: if you're going to read it, read it for its history of the search market through 2004, not because it's particularly insightful about either Google's history, the way Google works and makes strategic decisions, or the people and products that made Google what it is today.