Geek trivia

kranky

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
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At a convention I'm attending, Dave Girouard from Google Enterprise spoke at today's opening session.

He showed a screen shot of the original Google page from 1997. The letters were thicker, and it had a drop-down box letting you choose how many results you wanted to see per page. Other than that it looked pretty much the same as it does today.

Below the Google Search and I'm Feeling Lucky buttons , it said "© 1997 Stanford University"...

The trivia question is: why did they put the copyright notice on the page? He explained that including the copyright notice had nothing to do with any legal issue and it had nothing to do with Stanford.

Hint: it was related to something they learned while conducting user testing.

[edit: tried to make it clearer ]
 

kranky

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
21,019
156
106
I guess I should have said it had nothing to do with Stanford. ;)
 

kranky

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
21,019
156
106
Well, you guys are no fun.

Anyway, when Google did usability testing of their home page without the copyright notice in a lab environment, the testers went to the Google home page, and then sat there doing nothing.

Asked why they were sitting there, the people said they were waiting for the page to finish loading. No one had seen a page so sparse of content.

They added the copyright notice so people would realize that's all there was, and the page was finished loading.
 

Whitecloak

Diamond Member
May 4, 2001
6,074
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Originally posted by: kranky
Well, you guys are no fun.

Anyway, when Google did usability testing of their home page without the copyright notice in a lab environment, the testers went to the Google home page, and then sat there doing nothing.

Asked why they were sitting there, the people said they were waiting for the page to finish loading. No one had seen a page so sparse of content.

They added the copyright notice so people would realize that's all there was, and the page was finished loading.

nice. :thumbsup: