Showing posts with label Interesting Facts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interesting Facts. Show all posts

Monday, May 5, 2025

Interesting Facts About Rudraksha

 Rudra is the manifested form of Lord Shiva himself and Aksha translates to eyes; meaning, having originated from Lord Shiva’s eyes. Thus, A genuine Rudraksha seed has high significence, scientific properties, yet it is very mysterious and is regarded as highly sacred and precious by the devotees.

1. Shiva’s Tears

As the Legend has it, Lord Shiva had been meditating for thousands of years with his eyes closed. When he opened his eyes, some tears drops fell from his eyes on the ground. Later, these tears grew trees of Rudrakshas. The ardent followers of Shivaism thus regard Rudraksha sacred and to have originated from Lord Shiva’s own tears himself. It is thus believed to have miraculous powers and when possessed it is said bring them closer to Lord Shiva and develop a spiritual connection with him.

2. To Check Negative and Positive Prana

As, Sadhus and Sanyasis were continuously on the move, they could not drink water from just any pool because many times in nature, the water may be poisoned or contaminated in the forest. As the legend goes on, If a person well into spiritual practice; a Sadhu or a Sanyasi held a rudraksha above the water and if the water is good and drinkable, it will go clockwise. Similarly, If it is poisoned, it will go anticlockwise. It is said, if held above any positive pranic substance, it will move in a clockwise direction. If you hold it over any negative pranic substance, it will move in anti-clockwise direction.

3. The Deity and Mantras of Different Faces

Of all, only 1-14 faced Rudraksha are to be worn by humans. The deity and the Beej Mantra, which is to be chanted while wearing the Rudraksha and also the celestial body associated with, varies from one type of Mukhi appearance to another. For Single faced or Ek Mukhi Rudraksha the Ruling deity is Lord Shiva, Beej Mantra attributed is Om Hreem Namah and the Celestial body is the Sun. For all 21 different kinds, all of the three vary accordingly.

4. Ek Mukhi Rudraksha

Single-faced or Ek Mukhi Rudraksha is considered closest to Lord Shiva. When possessed, it is said to bring all kinds of materialistic pleasure and wealth. Though, the most commonly worn by all is Pancha Mukhi or five-faced Rudraksha.

5. The Mala

Traditionally the beads are strung together on a cotton or a silk thread as a Mala. Most commonly the number of beads is 108 plus one. The extra bead is the Bindu. There must always be a Bindu to the Mala, otherwise the energy becomes cyclical and people who are sensitive may become dizzy. An adult should not wear a Mala with less than 84 beads, plus the Bindu. Any number over that is considered fine.

6. Chanting and Japa Yoga

Rudraksha beads are aesthetically perceived to be most effective if in the practice of Japa Yoga, where, the Beej Mantra is repeated verbally or mentally 108 times a day while keeping count on a strand of Rudraksha beads and at the same time submitting oneself to Lord Shiva’s infinite, all-pervasive presence.

7. An Umbrella of Energy

The followers of Shivaism believe that the Rudraksha beads create a cocoon of your own energy. For someone who is constantly on the move, Rudraksha is a very good support because it creates a cocoon of your own energy. The situation around you may not be conducive to your kind of energy, it will not let you settle down. In the ancient times for Sadhus and Sanyasis (sages and preachers), places and situations could trouble them because they were constantly moving. One of the rules for them was never to put their head down in the same place twice.

8. Faces of Rudraksha

Different type of Rudraksha beeds have different numbers of segments (or faces) grooved over their surface giving the beads a unique texture. The segment or the face is called ‘Mukhi’ and the identification of a Rudraksha is primarily on a face or Mukhi appearance. The beads range from being one faced to 21 faced and each of them have different aesthetic values attributed to them.

9. A Shield

The Rudraksha beads, as the followers of Shaivism believe shield against the negative energies. It is possible for some people to use negative energies to cause harm to someone else. The Atharva Veda, is all about how to use energies to your advantage and to someone else’s detriment. The Rudraksha beads helps to create a cocoon of your own energy shielding the space against negative energies.

Gaurishankar Rudraksha 👆

10. Significance for Health

The Rudraksha Beads has many scientific properties that holds a lot of significance in the Ayurvedic medicine . It is said to lower your blood pressure, calms your nerves and brings a certain calmness and alertness in your nervous system. It will help them calm down and be more focused.

Monday, April 28, 2025

What are some interesting facts?

 

  1. Qatar is the richest country in the world.
  1. Egypt is home to the sixth largest dam that impounds the world's longest river, the Nile.
  1. Finland has 187,888 lakes!
  1. China produces around 29 million cars a year, more than the United States, Japan, and Germany combined.
  1. The current Danish national flag has been in use since 1625.
  1. Singapore is the most expensive city in the world.
  1. The richest city in the UAE is not Dubai, but Abu Dhabi.
  1. With more than 3,000 high-tech companies and startups, Israel has the highest concentration of high-tech companies in the world (outside of Silicon Valley).
  1. Colombia is the only country in South America that has coastlines on both the Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean Sea.
  1. South Africa is the only African country that possesses nuclear weapons.
  2. The Indian state of Uttar Pradesh has a population comparable to that of Pakistan! And if it were a country, it would be the seventh most populous country in the world.
  3. Iceland is the oldest democracy in the world.
  1. Japanese trains are among the most punctual in the world: their average delay is just 18 seconds!
  2. France is the most visited country in the world.
  3. Panama celebrates two days of independence, the first from Spain in 1821 and the second from Colombia 82 years later in 1903.
  4. University education in Germany is heavily subsidized, making it an attractive destination for local and international students.
  5. Russia has the longest railway in the world. The Trans-Siberian Railway stretches across almost the entire country, starting from Moscow in the west and traveling to Vladivostok in the east. The entire journey is 9,200 km (5,700 miles) long and would take 152 hours and 27 minutes to complete without stops.
  6. Italy has the largest number of UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

There are 30 million sheep in New Zealand compared to 4.4 million humans!

Australia's Highway 1 is the longest national highway in the world.

Tuesday, May 14, 2019

152 Fun, Odd Facts Most People Don't Know


There are all kinds of strange and interesting things going on that we just don't usually know about. I have compiled a list of over 200 odd facts—some believable, others unbelievable, and some that are just plain bizarre. If you have time to read them all, let me know which one is your favorite.


12 Weird and Fun Facts About Sports

  1. In 1963, major league baseball pitcher Gaylord Perry remarked, "They'll put a man on the moon before I hit a home run." On July 20, 1969, an hour after Neil Armstrong set foot on the surface of the moon, Perry hit is first, and only, home run while playing for the San Francisco Giants.
  2. Retired basketball sensation Michael Jordan makes more money from Nike each year than all the Nike factory workers in Malaysia combined.
  3. The Olympic flag's colors are always red, black, blue, green, and yellow rings on a field of white. This is because at least one of those colors appears on the flag of every nation on the planet.
  4. The average lifespan of a major league baseball: 7 pitches.
  5. Dueling is legal is Paraguay as long as both parties are registered blood donors.
  6. All major league baseball umpires must wear black underwear while on the job in case their pants split.
  7. In 1920, Babe Ruth out-homered very American League team.
  8. Babe Ruth wore a cabbage leaf under his cap to keep his head cool. He changed it every two innings.
  9. Every year 56,000,000 people attend major league baseball games.
  10. In 18th century England, gambling dens employed someone whose job was to swallow the dice if there was a police raid.
  11. A Costa Rican worker who makes baseballs earns about $2,750 annually. The average American pro baseball player earns $2,377,000 per year.
  12. There are 336 dimples on a regulation golf ball.

  1. 31 Weird Science Facts
  1. The moon is moving away from the Earth at a tiny, although measurable, rate every year. 85 million years ago it was orbiting the Earth about 35 feet from the planet's surface.
  2. The star Antares is 60,000 times larger than our sun. If our sun were the size of a softball, the star Antares would be as large as a house.
  3. In Calama, a town in the Atacama Desert of Chile, it has never rained.
  4. At any given time, there are 1,800 thunderstorms in progress over the earth's atmosphere.
  5. Erosion at the base of Niagara Falls has caused the falls to recede approximately seven miles over the past 10,000 years.
  6. A ten-year-old mattress weighs double what it did when it was new due to debris that it absorbs over time. That debris includes dust mites (their droppings and decaying bodies), mold, millions of dead skin cells, dandruff, animal and human hair, secretions, excretions, lint, pollen, dust, soil, sand, and a lot of perspiration, which the average person loses at a rate of a quart a day. Good night!
  7. Every year 16 million gallons of oil runs off pavement into streams, rivers, and eventually, oceans in the United States. This is more oil than was spilled by the Exxon Valdez.
  8. In space, astronauts cannot cry because there is no gravity and tears can't flow.
  9. Most lipstick contains fish scales.
  10. A "jiffy" is an actual unit of time: 1/100th of a second.
  11. If you have three quarters, four dimes, and four pennies you have $1.19. you also have the largest possible amount of money in coins without being able to make change for a dollar.
  12. Leonardo Da Vinci invented scissors.
  13. Recycling one glass jar saves enough energy to operate a television for three hours.
  14. The cigarette lighter was invented before the match.
  15. The main library at Indiana University sinks over an inch a year. When it was designed engineers failed to take into account the weight of all the books that would occupy the building.
  16. A category three hurricane releases more energy in ten minutes that all the world's nuclear weapons combined.
  17. There is enough fuel in full jumbo jet tank to drive an average car four times around the world.
  18. An average of 100 people choke to death on ballpoint pens every year.
  19. Antarctica is the only continent without reptiles or snakes.
  20. The cruise liner Queen Elizabeth 2 moves only six inches for each gallon of fuel it burns.
  21. San Francisco cable cars are the only National Monuments that can move.
  22. February 1865 is the only month in recorded history not to have a full moon.
  23. Nutmeg is extremely poisonous if injected intravenously.
  24. A rainbow can be seen only in the morning or late afternoon. It can occur only when the sun is 40 degrees or less above the horizon.
  25. Lightning strikes the Earth 100 times every second.
  26. La Paz, Bolivia has an average annual temperature below 50 degrees Fahrenheit. However, it has never recorded a zero-degree temperature. Same for Stanley, the Falkland Islands, and Punta Arenas, Chile.
  27. There are over 87,000 Americans on waiting lists for organ transplants.
  28. Catsup leaves the bottle at a rate of 25 miles per year.
  29. Toxic house plants poison more children than household chemicals do.
  30. You are more likely to be infected by flesh-eating bacteria than you are to be struck by lightning.
  31. According to Genesis 1:20-22, the chicken came before the egg.


It is physically impossible for you to lick your own elbow.
It is physically impossible for you to lick your own elbow.

21 Odd Facts About Your Body

  1. It is physically impossible for you to lick your elbow.
  2. Like fingerprints, everyone's tongue print is different.
  3. Your heart beats over 100,000 times a day.
  4. It takes approximately 12 hours for food to entirely digest.
  5. A sneeze travels out your mouth at over 100 m.p.h.
  6. Women blink nearly twice as often as men.
  7. Most of the dust particles in your house are dead skin.
  8. There is a company that will (for $14,000) take your ashes and compress them into a synthetic diamond to be set in jewelry for a loved one.
  9. There are more living organisms on the skin of a single human being than there are human beings on the surface of the earth.
  10. The longest bout of hiccups lasted nearly 69 years.
  11. Babies is born without kneecaps. They appear between the ages of 2 and 6.
  12. Men can read smaller print than women. Women can hear better.
  13. Wearing headphones for just an hour will increase the bacteria in your ear by 700 times.
  14. If you sneeze too hard you can fracture a rib. If you try to suppress a sneeze you can rupture a blood vessel in your head or neck and die. If you keep your eyes open by force they can pop out.
  15. A kiss stimulates 29 muscles and chemicals that cause relaxation. Women seem to like light and frequent kisses while men like them more strenuous.
  16. Every time you lick a stamp, you're consuming 1/10 of a calorie.
  17. Our eyes are always the same size from birth, but our nose and ears never stop growing.
  18. The average person falls asleep in seven minutes.
  19. Almost everyone who reads this will try to lick their elbow.
  20. According to Chinese acupuncture, there is a point on the head that you can press to control your appetite. It is located in the hollow just in front of the flap of the ear.
  21. In a recent survey, Americans revealed that banana was their favorite smell.


36 Really Cool Animal Facts

  1. When opossums are "playing 'possum," they are not playing. They actually pass out from sheer terror.
  2. The two-foot long bird called a Kea that lives in New Zealand likes to eat the strips of rubber around car windows.
  3. Snakes are true carnivores as they eat nothing but other animals. They do not eat any type of plant material.
  4. The Weddell seal can travel underwater for seven miles without surfacing for air.
  5. According to tests made at the Institute for the Study of Animal Problems in Washington, D.C., dogs and cats, like people, are either right-handed or left-handed—that is, they favor either their right or left paws.
  6. An iguana can stay under water for 28 minutes.
  7. Crocodiles and alligators are surprisingly fast on land. Although they are rapid, they are not agile, so if you ever find yourself chased by one, run in a zigzag line. You'll lose him or her every time.
  8. Horses can't vomit.
  9. A crocodile cannot stick its tongue out.
  10. Butterflies taste with their feet.
  11. Penguins can jump as high as six feet in the air.
  12. All polar bears are left-handed.
  13. An eagle can kill a young deer and fly carrying it.
  14. It was discovered on a space mission that a frog can throw up. The frog vomits its entire stomach out so the organ is dangling out of its mouth. Then the frog uses its forearms to dig out all of the stomach's contents and swallows the stomach back down again.
  15. The leg bones of a bat are so thin that no bat can walk.
  16. The katydid bug hears through holes in its hind legs.
  17. Slugs have four noses.
  18. Ostriches stick their heads in the sand to look for water.
  19. In a study of 200,000 ostriches over a period of 80 years there were no reported cases of an ostrich burying its head in the sand.
  20. It's possible to lead a cow upstairs, but not downstairs.
  21. A shrimp's heart is in its head.
  22. A snail can sleep for three years.
  23. The chicken is one of the few things that man eats before it's born and after it's dead.
  24. Some dogs can predict when a child will have an epileptic seizure and even protect the child from injury. They're not trained to do this, they simply learn to respond after observing at least one attack.
  25. A pregnant goldfish is called a twit.
  26. Rats multiply so quickly that in 18 months, two rats could have over a million descendants.
  27. There are only three types of snakes on the island of Tasmania and all three are deadly poisonous.
  28. It is physically impossible for pigs to look up into the sky.
  29. Dolphins sleep with one eye open.
  30. A goldfish has a memory span of three seconds.
  31. A shark is the only fish that can blink with both eyes.
  32. Emus and kangaroos cannot walk backwards and are on the Australian coat of arms for that reason.
  33. The jellyfish is 95% water.
  34. A hippo can open its mouth wide enough to fit a 4 foot tall child inside.
  35. Only female mosquitoes bite.
  36. Most elephants weigh less than the tongue of the blue whale.


President Bush was re-elected in 2004 by less than 31% of all eligible voters in the United States.

30 Odd Historical Facts

  1. The world's youngest parents were age 8 and 9. They lived in China and had their child in 1910.
  2. Kotex was first manufactured as bandages, during WWI.
  3. In the 16th and 17th centuries in the country of Turkey, anyone caught drinking coffee was put to death.
  4. Abraham Lincoln's dog, Fido, was also assassinated.
  5. In England, the Speaker of the House is not allowed to speak.
  6. About 3,000 years ago, most Egyptians died by the time they were 30.
  7. The first known contraceptive was crocodile dung, used by Egyptians in 2000 B.C.
  8. If a statue in the park of a person on a horse has both front legs in the air, the person died in battle. If the horse has one front leg in the air, the person died as a result of wounds received in battle. If the horse has all four legs on the ground, the person died of natural causes.
  9. The youngest pope was 11 years old.
  10. Richard Versalle, a tenor performing at New York's Metropolitan Opera House, suffered a heart attack and fell 10 feet from a ladder to the stage just after singing the line, "You can only live so long."
  11. 60.7 percent of eligible voters participated in the 2004 presidential election, the highest percentage in 36 years. However, more than 78 million did not vote. This means President Bush was re-elected by less than 31% of all eligible voters in the United States.
  12. David Bowie used to think he was being stalked by someone who is dressed like a giant pink rabbit. Bowie noticed the fan at several recent concerts, but became alarmed when he got on a plane and the bunny was also on board.
  13. Dr. Samuel A. Mudd was the physician who set the leg of Lincoln's assassin, John Wilkes Booth, and whose shame created the expression for ignominy: "His name is Mudd."
  14. Wayne's World was filmed in two weeks.
  15. The first Fords had engines made by Dodge.
  16. In Ancient Egypt , priests plucked every hair from their bodies, including their eyebrows and eyelashes.
  17. More than 8,100 US troops are still listed as missing in action from the Korean War.
  18. As of January 1, 2004, the population of the United States increases by one person every 12 seconds. There is a birth every eight seconds, an immigrant is added every 25 seconds, and a death every 13 seconds.
  19. Inn the great fire of 1666, half of London was burnt down but only six people were injured.
  20. Toto was paid $125 per week while filming The Wizard of Oz.
  21. The only member of the band ZZ Top without a beard has the last name Beard.
  22. The electric chair was invented by a dentist.
  23. In Egypt around 1500 B.C., a shaved head was considered the ultimate in feminine beauty. Egyptian women removed every hair from their heads with special gold tweezers and polished their scalps to a high sheen with buffing cloths.
  24. George Lumley, aged 104, married Mary Dunning, aged 10, in Nortallerton, England on August 25, 1783. She was the great-great granddaughter of the woman who'd broken her engagement to Lumley, eighty years before.
  25. In Elizabethan England, the spoon was so novel and prized that people carried their own folding spoons to banquets.
  26. It costs more to buy a new car today in the United States than it cost Christopher Columbus to equip and undertake three voyages to and from the New World.
  27. Ancient Egyptians slept on pillows made of stone.
  28. Millie the White House dog earned more than four times as President Bush in 1991.
  29. A law passed in Nebraska in 1912 set hard rules of the road. Drivers in the country at night were required to stop every 150 yards, send up a skyrocket, then wait eight minutes for the road to clear before proceeding cautiously, all the while blowing their horn and shooting off flares.
  30. Louis XIV of France really was as unpleasant a fellow as he's been depicted. In 1674, when he was visiting a school at Clermont, he heard from the school's authorities that one of the children, a nine- year-old Irish lad named Francis Seldon, had made a pun about the king's bald head.
    Louis was furious. He had a secret warrant drawn up for the child's arrest, and young Seldon was thrown into solitary confinement in the Bastille. His parents, members of one of Europe's richest merchant families, were told simply that the child had disappeared. Days turned to months, months to years, and Louis himself passed away. But Francis spent sixty-nine years "in the hole" for making fun of the king's baldness.


11 Fun Facts About Machines and Technology

  1. The microwave was invented after a researcher walked by a radar tube and the chocolate bar in his pocket melted.
  2. 23% of all photocopier faults world-wide are caused by people sitting on them and photocopying their butts.
  3. "Stewardesses" is the longest word that is typed using only the left hand.
  4. 71% of office workers stopped on the street for a survey agreed to give up their computer passwords in exchange for a chocolate bar.
  5. The electric chair was invented by a dentist.
  6. A Boeing 767 airliner is made of 3,100,000 separate parts.
  7. The first FAX machine was patented in 1843, 33 years before Alexander Graham Bell demonstrated the telephone.
  8. Hershey's Kisses are called that because the machine that makes them looks like it's kissing the conveyor belt.
  9. "Typewriter" is the longest word that can be made using the keys on only one row of the keyboard.
  10. In 1980, there was only one country in the world with no telephones: Bhutan.
  11. More than 50% of the people in the world have never made or received a telephone call.

11 Cool Facts About the English Language

  1. No word in the English language rhymes with month, orange, silver, or purple.
  2. The "sixth sick sheik's sixth sheep's sick" is said to be the
    toughest tongue twister in the English language.
  3. "Go," is the shortest complete sentence in the English language.
  4. The phrase "rule of thumb" is derived from an old English law which stated that you couldn't beat your wife with anything wider than your thumb.
  5. The term "the whole 9 yards" came from WWII fighter pilots in the South Pacific. When arming their airplanes on the ground, the .50 caliber machine gun ammo belts measured exactly 27 feet, before being loaded into the fuselage. If the pilots fired all their ammo at a target, it got "the whole 9 yards."
  6. There are only four words in the English language which end in "-dous": tremendous, horrendous, stupendous, and hazardous.
  7. The word "testify" is based on the Ancient Roman practice of making men swear on their testicles when making a statement in court.
  8. In England in the 1880s, "pants" was considered a dirty word.
  9. According to many language experts, the most difficult kind of phrase to create is a palindrome, a sentence or group of sentences that reads the same backward and forward. A few examples:

    Red rum, sir, is murder.

    Ma is as selfless as I am.

    Nurse, I spy gypsies. Run!

    A man, a plan, a canal - Panama.

    He lived as a devil, eh?
  10. The dot that appears over the letter i is called a "tittle."
  11. If you were to spell out numbers, you would you have to go until 1,000 until you would find the letter A.

14 Odd Facts About Food

  1. Montpelier, VT is the only U.S. state capital without a McDonalds.
  2. There is a bar in London that sells vaporized vodka, which is inhaled instead of sipped.
  3. In the White House, there are 13,092 knives, forks, and spoons.
  4. Americans on average eat 18 acres of pizza every day.
  5. Coca-cola was originally green.
  6. The only food that does not spoil: honey.
  7. The Pilgrims ate popcorn at the first Thanksgiving dinner.
  8. Iceland consumes more Coca-Cola per capita than any other nation.
  9. Almonds are members of the peach family.
  10. Cranberry is the only Jell-O flavor that contains real fruit flavoring.
  11. The drive-through line on opening day at the McDonald's restaurant in Kuwait City, Kuwait was seven miles long at its peak.
  12. American Airlines saved $40,000 in 1987 by eliminating one olive from each salad served first class.
  13. Celery has negative calories! It takes more calories to eat a piece of celery than the celery has in it to begin with.
  14. The average American drinks about 600 sodas a year.


Hope this guy isn't in Topeka! It's illegal in Kansas to catch fish with your bare hands.
Hope this guy isn't in Topeka! It's illegal in Kansas to catch fish with your bare hands.

Saturday, May 11, 2019

Google & Alphabet: 26 Extraordinary Facts



Google has grown and changed a lot since its founding in 1998, and there’s a lot of history packed in those years, some of which might surprise you.
You may know that co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin met as graduate students at Stanford, but did you know that Stanford still holds the patent to certain Google algorithms? And that the first search engine Page and Brin created, to be later developed into Google, was named “BackRub”? (“Google” has recently been added to the dictionary, so it’s a good thing they changed it — otherwise talking about Internet searches would be a bit more awkward.)
From its humble beginnings, processing just a few pages per second and taking up just a few 4GB hard drives, Google has expanded to be able to process millions of pages and now has over 100 million gigabytes of data. Even the Google logo has also gone through many changes, including over 2000 Google doodles designed by a team of designers and illustrators , from the very first one in 1998 that featuring Burning Man stick figure.
Nowadays, Google is much more than just a search engine, expanding into other avenues like Google Glass , smartwatches , maybe even robots and space elevators in the near future.
Fact is, Google has been a unique and unconventional company from the beginning. Here are some weird and crazy facts you never would have guessed about this iconic company.

Transcript: 26 Facts About Google

Do you remember what it was like before you could “Google” something? From it’s revolutionary inception to its commonplace use, Google continues to be an online giant with secrets and idiosyncrasies.
  1. Early Google

  2. One of the early versions of Google could process 30-50 pages per second.
    • Now Google can process millions of pages per second.
  3. Google was first stored on ten 4 GB hard drives in a Lego casing, now showcased by Stanford University.
    • The Lego design would let the founders expand storage capacity easily.
    • The index now has over 100 million GB of data.
  4. Google’s original name was Backrub, based on the system finding and ranking pages based on back links.
  5. Since the founders weren’t looking to start their own business, they tried to sell their search engine system.
    • Yahoo originally said no, but in 2002 offered to buy Google for $3 billion.
    • Google said no, and it’s now valued at $400 billion.
  6. The name Google was a misspelling.
    • One story says investors misspelled the mathematical term “googol” as “google” on a check, and the spelling stuck.
    • Another story says that a fellow student misspelled “googol” when looking for an available name for the company.
  7. Stanford still owns the patent to Google’s algorithm, named PageRank.
  8. The company’s unofficial motto is “Don’t be evil.”

    Google Homepage

  9. In 1998, the Google homepage included a Yahoo-like punctuation mark: the exclamation point!
  10. The homepage is notoriously sparse because the founders didn’t know HTML to make it fancy, and they wanted a simple user interface.
    • At first, you had to press the return key on the keyboard, as they didn’t know how to design a submit button.
  11. The first Google Doodle was an out-of-office message in 1998 when Brin and Page were traveling to Nevada to attend the Burning Man festival.
    • The doodle was a man standing behind the second O.
    • They wanted users to know they wouldn’t be available to fix tech issues.
  12. The first April Fool’s joke was in 2000 when Google announced it’s mind reading ability for searches called “MentalPlex.”
  13. Until March 2001, the Google homepage was aligned on the right side of the page instead of centered.
  14. Google added Klingon as a language interface option in 2002.

    Google Communications and Apps

  15. The company’s first tweet was “I’m feeling lucky” in binary code.
    • “I’m 01100110 01100101 01100101 01101100 01101001 01101110 01100111 00100000 01101100 01110101 01100011 01101011 01111001 00001010.”
  16. In 2006, the Merriam-Webster and Oxford English Dictionaries included the verb “google” in their listings.
    • It is a transitive verb, meaning “to use the Google search engine to obtain information about (as a person) on the World Wide Web.”
  17. The Google Street View has about 28 million miles of photographed roads.
  18. Google’s reCAPTCHA feature uses warped words identified by users for the computers to learn what words are in scanned books.
    • Google’s reCAPTCHA helps their computers learn how to read text.
      • The computers are able to identify words scanned from books, even if they are warped.

    The Googleplex

  19. Google rents 200 goats to “mow” the weeds and brush around headquarters.
  20. Dogs with strong bladders and friendly dispositions are welcomed in the offices, but cats are discouraged due to the number of dogs present.
  21. Known for providing gourmet food and snacks to employees, the first Google snack in 1999 was Swedish Fish, a chewy candy.
  22. Headquarters is full of odd decorations, such as a T-Rex nicknamed Stan, a space ship, pink flamingos, a Lego figure, adult-sized ball pits, Android statues and phone boxes painted in Google colors.
  23. As employees are called Googlers, new employees are called Nooglers.

    The Founders and their Company

  24. Larry Page and Sergey Brin met at Stanford when Brin was tasked to show Page around the school as a new student.
  25. Larry Page’s brother was a co-founder of a eGroups, a dot-com company that Yahoo bought for about $500 million in 2000.
  26. Google acquired YouTube via meetings at Denny’s.
  27. Google has averaged a new company acquisition each week since 2010.
Since the outset, Google has worked hard to be unconventional and innovative. As an archetype for the modern tech company, Google continues to set the bar for the interesting, offbeat, and creative.