Google shows off new Seattle digs
As Google tells it, the company wanted to hire two engineers who lived in Seattle.
The engineers didn't want to move to Mountain View, California, Google's headquarters,
so the company opened up a Seattle office.
That was four years ago, and now Google
employs around 400 people in the Seattle area. Google has two offices, one in
the suburb of Kirkland and another recently opened in the much-hipper Fremont
neighborhood of the city, locally known as the center of the universe. Fremont
is so laid-back that it has its own time zone: A welcome sign in the neighborhood
instructs visitors to set their clocks back five minutes.
Whether or not the story about the two engineers is true, Google was also likely
drawn to Seattle because of the University
of Washington, long a breeding ground for computer scientists who naturally
slid into jobs at Microsoft.
Google executives speaking at a press open house at the company's Fremont offices
said they didn't know if engineers they hire from the university also entertained
jobs at Microsoft. But Shiva Shivakumar, vice president of engineering at Google,
said this: "We haven't lost to too many other companies in the area."
Google currently employs 35 engineers with doctorates from the university.
For its part, the university seems happy to supply graduates to either company.
As an example of its openness, Ed Lazowska, who holds the title of Bill and
Melinda Gates Chair in Computer Science and Engineering at the University of
Washington, attended the event at Google on Tuesday.
Engineers in the Seattle office, which just barely slips into third place behind
Google offices in New York and Mountain View in terms of size, have worked on
a number of products including terrain maps on Google Maps; tools for Web site
developers such as Website Optimizer; and Google's instant messaging service.
In the future, the Seattle engineers will increasingly focus on systems, said
Brian Bershad, an engineering director and the Seattle site director. He was
hired in late October after serving as a professor of computer science at the
University of Washington.
By systems, Bershad means that his engineers will work on developing technology
that helps the search engine very quickly sort through the mountains of data
in the company's data centers in order to present results back to users. "It's
not enough to just organize the world's information, we have to be able to answer
questions quickly," Bershad said.
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