Posts Tagged ‘google’

Google shirts

Wednesday, April 20th, 2005

I’ve accumulated so many Google shirts that it’s often all I wear to work — I’m a lazy dresser. This is fine at work, but sometimes I feel a little awkward outside of work. I was at the grocery store tonight after my Korean lesson. The guy behind me in line says, you work at Google, pointing to my shirt, and I said yes, and he said lucky you. This isn’t the first time someone’s said that to me and I always wonder what exactly they mean. Lucky me because Google’s an awesome place to work? Or lucky me cause you think I’ve made money on the IPO? If it’s the former, then yay! lucky me! If it’s the latter, I didn’t go full time until after the IPO. I sort of have this desire to tell people that.

I had a cashier at Long’s tell me once how lucky I was to work there; when did I start? About a year ago. Oh! Before the IPO. So lucky. What university did you graduate from? USC. It’s a question my mother would’ve asked. I wanted to tell her I started there before the IPO, but was a contractor for almost a year before I went full time. But what right does she have to that additional information about me? I guess in some way I want to comfort her — to let her know that she may think I’m luckier than her, but I’m not really. I’m a lot like her — just a working girl with bills to pay. Maybe I like my job and the company I work for more than she likes hers, but we’re really not so different at all.

Interviews

Friday, August 20th, 2004

I had a 3.5 hour interview yesterday. Including the drive out there and back I felt like that’s all I did yesterday. I was really nervous about talking to the tech guy because the person who set up the interview said he’d be really tough and was a curmudgeon. Curmudgeon I don’t mind, tough makes me nervous. And, of course, he’s the only person’s who’s feedback I’m interested in. I’m not very good at selling myself. It sort of scares me to death. But it turned out he liked me and thought I had the technical chops. Woohoo!

And New Scientist emailed me and said the Senior Editor wants to meet and chat with me!! I’m sure they sent that email out to all their San Francisco subscribers, but I’m so excited about meeting and talking to that guy. Must catch up on my New Scientist reading…

Hey, Google IPO’ed yesterday!

Shot in the bum

Tuesday, April 6th, 2004

I had the funniest thing happen to me at work today — the toilet quite unexpectedly squirted water at me while I was urinating. Hit me right in the bum at full pressure — I was stunned, then immediately thought of a story I’d heard about a woman who got stuck on the toilet because the bum rinsing function wouldn’t turn off and she sat there and sat there and finally just got up and out as fast as she could but still managed to get her clothes soaked. It doesn’t really seem right that these toilets have the power to squirt back at you. Luckily, mine shut off when I hit the “off” button. I managed to get out dry.

Send me email

Friday, April 2nd, 2004

I signed up for a new href="http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20040331005958&newsLang=en">gmail
account — Ed and I have been sending each other email to see what kinds
of ads we can generate. Gmail generates ads based on the content of your
email message. So far in three messages to Ed about 1) sex, 2) cows, 3) bad
teeth, I’ve only managed to have ads generated for the third email — several dentist/teeth care ads. Care to make an effort by penning me some lovely prose?

First day at Google

Monday, March 29th, 2004
  1. Toilet seat warmers that made me giggle non-stop the first time I sat on them.
  2. All you can eat trail mix — most new employees gain an average of 15 pounds after they start working at Google.
  3. Coffee, espresso, milk — and engineers who explain how to make the perfect cup every time.
  4. A workstation named “bo-kitty” that I log into as “kat”.
  5. Working next to my best friend — and keeping him honest :)

Going to Google

Wednesday, March 10th, 2004

I got offered a temporary job at Google last week and deliberated for three days then decided to go with it. I won’t go into all the factors that concerned me in my mental mastications, but it wasn’t an easy decision. I’m almost as emotionally attached to Google as I am to EFF, but in the end I couldn’t turn away the challenge of the work I’d be doing at Google.

What I found interesting in all of this — in dicussions about the possibility of working there — is the peripheral excitement that I felt around me as I had conversations with various people — my close friends, a couple of work buddies, some other Googlers. Everyone was excited for me. Everyone, of course, would support me in whatever decision I made, but gosh, they were excited about Google.

And I thought about how emotional attachments can skew your perspective, alter your decisions, make subtle changes in the way you analyze the cost-benefit of a particular situation. Places like EFF, Google, Friendster, and countless others — like Apache, Amazon, Powells, Netscape (still!)…they all have a special place in my heart. Why did I take a webmaster job at EFF when I knew I’d be bored out of my mind? Because it was EFF. And I didn’t really want to leave EFF, but I couldn’t turn away the offer of an interview at Google. And when Friendster emailed me, I entertained them, too. Not because I wanted to leave, but because it was Friendster. And why would I leave the security and comfort of not so challenging, but incredibly emotionally fulfilling full-time job for a temporary gig? Because it’s Google. And I can’t pass up that opportunity. Now that I am leaving, I’m sad to be going. But I’m also excited about the new things I’ll be developing at Google, too.