It Turns Out Google Co-founders Larry Page And Sergy Brin Are Actually Pretty Lousy Coders

It Turns Out Google Co-founders Larry Page And Sergy Brin Are Actually Pretty Lousy Coders

NICHOLAS CARLSON OCT. 30, 2013, 12:36 PM 6,981 11

If you’re like me, you’ve probably always assumed that Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin are pretty great at writing code. You may have even assumed that Page and Brin wrote the code that made Google.com so fast and powerful as long ago as the late 1990s. Wrong! I’ve been reading early Googler Douglas Edwards’ excellent book about the company’s startup days. It’s called “I’m Feeling Lucky: The Confessions of Google Employee Number 59. You should buy it if startups fascinate you. The book reveals that Page and Brin actually had little to do with making the code that powered Google back then. In the book, early Google engineering boss Craig Silverstein says “I didn’t trust Larry and Sergey as coders.”“I had to deal with their legacy code from the Stanford days and it had a lot of problems. They’re research coders: more interested in writing code that works than code that’s maintainable.”

One Google engineer from back then says the most remarkable thing about the co-founders’ code was that when it broke, users would see  funny error message: “Whoa, horsey!”

It turns out the developers most responsible for building the Google.com that quickly became the Web’s most powerful company are two guys you’ve probably never heard of.

The first is Urs Hözle. According to one early Googler quoted by Edwards, Hözle was “the key” to Google’s early success.

Edwards writes, “Enough engineers sang his praises that this book could have been written entirely as a hagiography of Saint Urs, Keeper of the Blessed Code.”

The second is Jeff Dean. Edwards writes that “Jeff pumped out elegant code like a champagne fountain at a wedding.”

“It seemed to pour from him effortlessly in endless streams that flowed together to form sparkling programs that did remarkable things. He once wrote a two-hundred-thousand-line application to help the Centers for Disease Control manage specialized statistics for epidemiologists. It’s still in use and garners more peer citations than any of the dozens of patented programs he has produced in a decade at Google. He wrote it as a summer intern in high school.”

Hözle and Dean still work at Google. Dean is so highly regarded that Google employees still make flattering jokes about it.

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Kee Koon Boon (“KB”) is the co-founder and director of HERO Investment Management which provides specialized fund management and investment advisory services to the ARCHEA Asia HERO Innovators Fund (www.heroinnovator.com), the only Asian SMID-cap tech-focused fund in the industry. KB is an internationally featured investor rooted in the principles of value investing for over a decade as a fund manager and analyst in the Asian capital markets who started his career at a boutique hedge fund in Singapore where he was with the firm since 2002 and was also part of the core investment committee in significantly outperforming the index in the 10-year-plus-old flagship Asian fund. He was also the portfolio manager for Asia-Pacific equities at Korea’s largest mutual fund company. Prior to setting up the H.E.R.O. Innovators Fund, KB was the Chief Investment Officer & CEO of a Singapore Registered Fund Management Company (RFMC) where he is responsible for listed Asian equity investments. KB had taught accounting at the Singapore Management University (SMU) as a faculty member and also pioneered the 15-week course on Accounting Fraud in Asia as an official module at SMU. KB remains grateful and honored to be invited by Singapore’s financial regulator Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) to present to their top management team about implementing a world’s first fact-based forward-looking fraud detection framework to bring about benefits for the capital markets in Singapore and for the public and investment community. KB also served the community in sharing his insights in writing articles about value investing and corporate governance in the media that include Business Times, Straits Times, Jakarta Post, Manual of Ideas, Investopedia, TedXWallStreet. He had also presented in top investment, banking and finance conferences in America, Italy, Sydney, Cape Town, HK, China. He has trained CEOs, entrepreneurs, CFOs, management executives in business strategy & business model innovation in Singapore, HK and China.

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