Living the Good Life, Leaving Google Behind 176
inetsee writes with an article in the San Francisco Chronicle profiling seven early Googlers who have left the company, part of a cohort the article claims amounts to 100 out of the first 300 workers hired by Google. For these former employees, all the acclaimed perks of life at the Googleplex can't compete with calling the shots in their own lives. Google's chef is opening his own restaurant, Olana Khan has started a non-profit that makes micro-loans to entrepreneurs in developing countries, and Aydin Senkut has become an angel investor. Others are simply enjoying retirement, making things in the garage shop or skydiving in South Africa.
People getting tired and moving on (Score:4, Insightful)
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You must be new here. All you have to do is submit a story, ANY story, that mentions Google and the Slashdot editors start salivating....
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Ask Slashdot: Does Google Make You Drool?
An anonymous fanboy writes, "Why does POP mail still exist? Why do people still talk about Flickr and GARMIN maps? Should the Linux kernel be rewritten on a micro-google architecture? Nintendo was just copying Google when they came up with the idea of the Wiiiiiiimote. Elvis isn't dead, he's just not attending shareholder meetings anymore. The SEC and DOJ are investigating all the back-dating scandals using a secret new Google API."
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You must be new here. All you have to do is submit a story, ANY story, that mentions Google and the Slashdot editors start salivating....
Yes, BUT, way before the
These technology companies were well funded by venture capital, but usually in the beginning still gave developers, programmers, and any EARLY employee
huge stock grants, thousands of shares for prices like
Re:People getting tired and moving on (Score:5, Informative)
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Valid responses are along the lines of "oh noes!! Google is dying, eleventyone!!! They are so kewl!!!" or "Har har! Serve them right for being evil! What goes around comes around."
Quick Poll... (Score:5, Funny)
1. Leave to pursue your interests.
2. Continue to work at the company until retiremennt.
3. Burn the money in a huge trash barrel and join a Buddist monestary.
4. Hire private detectives to stalk CowboyNeal?
Re:Quick Poll... (Score:5, Funny)
Hell, I could just sit around all day and post on slashdot. Oh, right.
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I know someone who does this, he starts companies, and builds them until they get to the point where he starts to have to do more management than work*. Then he leaves it to people who like management and starts something else where he can do that work* he likes.
*You know what I mean... actual technical work where he can get into the gears and muck around with systems. I'm not tryi
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That's contractual. When a start-up is acquired, they typically keep the owner on in a mgmt role for 9-12 months and then he bails. It is a standard part of such acquisition agreements to reduce the risk to the buyer that the place will just fall apart after they've forked over a load of cash. Don't make more of it than wh
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Re:Quick Poll... (Score:5, Funny)
I would sleep with two women at the same time.
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Each to their own. I'd be wide awake and loving it
Re:Quick Poll... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Quick Poll... (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Quick Poll... (Score:4, Insightful)
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If you must, then just make sure you've got the rules all worked out ahead of time. You don't want the best 45 minutes of your life to be followed by the worst month of your life.
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Well, the type of women that'd double up on a dude like me.
Thanks for the correction. I knew that I should have looked the quote up on IMDB first.
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3. Burn the money in a huge trash barrel and join a Buddist monestary.
You mean like the K Foundation did? The K Foundation burn a million quid [wikipedia.org].
I think I'll start a new web page entitled "please give me a million so I can set fire to it", each doner will get a little bit of the ash. It's sure to work!
No need to be a millionaire to pursue your dream (Score:5, Insightful)
You live only once. You are young only once. So, you should do whatever it is you really want to do.
This, of course, is why it is so important to live frugaly and avoid debt -- it can rob you of your freedom. There's nothing worse than some student debt with a side dish of some credit cards, a long-term cell phone contract, and a car lease.
Re:No need to be a millionaire to pursue your drea (Score:2)
Working somewhere else and saving some money before heading out on your own is no guarantee of success either, but it's likely to put you in a better position, as not being on the verge of starvation can be
Re:No need to be a millionaire to pursue your drea (Score:2)
a million doesnt go far in SF area (Score:2)
Re:No need to be a millionaire to pursue your drea (Score:3)
Because if you don't, you can easily find yourself with your dream fulfilled - but years behind where you need to be in able to get a job, let alone fund your retirement. Fulfilled dreams don't put a roof over your head or fo
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A statement which is known as a false choice [wikipedia.org], or more commonly as a strawman [wikipedia.org].
I suspect most people here on Slashdot would be in for a rude awakening if they tried.
Re:No need to be a millionaire to pursue your drea (Score:2)
People think they need to pay their dues because they need a way to pay their bills. You can go ahead being malnourished only owning what can fit in a backpack with your good attitude. I will continue to enjoy "paying my dues" while I live in a nice apartment overlooking Lake Michigan posting on Slashdot from my fast computer an
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At 23 years of age, how much of your apartment, computer, TV is paid?
Anyone can get a computer easily, a TV is a couple of months salary at worst. A house is something else. How long have you been paying for it and for how much longer will you have to work to finish paying it?
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I ask you because I did the math once and figured out I would need to save 10 years pay to afford a good house (i.e. on a quiet neighbourhood with plenty of space). I guess this is reasonable considering the time vs number of people required to build a house. I am leaning for a house away from the city rather than an apartment because I think these have a better bang for the buck.
The good neighbourhoods in central places seem to cost 5-6x more. Sure I could save on transport by being there and using pub
In the meantime... (Score:4, Informative)
I've done about 10 interviews with them, they went OK (although they don't really seem to know what they are doing in their hiring process...) but after the "on-site" interviews 2 months ago they simply forgot to get back to me with feedback. I imagine this happens with a lot of people, they spend several months being interviewed with google and getting this sucky treatment. Google deals with the hiring process as an investment, and as it seems, so do the job applicants. Part of the people that get actually hired will spend some time in the company and get away for a "promotion" in another company just because they've worked for Google, partially motivated by the way the company dealt with them since the beginning.
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Forgot? As in, conveniently forgot?
Google can afford to treat people this way when they don't want to hire them because even if they tell bad stories lots of other people will still want to work for them.
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That happened where I used to work--not to me, but to somebody we wanted to hire. He interviewed, my boss dragg
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The funny thing is that they do actually take months to decide. They seem to interview a lot of candidates, then make a decision. If you are one of the first ones to be interviewed in a batch, you can get to wait for a long time.
It can take a long time to decide, but I don't think it has anything to do with "batches", just a fairly long, involved, and somewhat bureaucratic hiring process. As far as I know, each candidate is considered solely on their own merits. The case you described (not being contacted after an interview) sounds like a plain old screw-up, and I can't think of any good excuses for it.
Disclaimer: I work for Google and am a bit involved in the hiring process, as is almost everyone in Google engineering.
100 out of 300 in 6 years, not that bad actually (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:100 out of 300 in 6 years, not that bad actuall (Score:3, Informative)
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"Welcome to Initech! We got you, you dumb bastards! Ah ha hah ha!"
Worst Day Fishing better than Best Day Working (Score:5, Insightful)
There are lots of people out there who "love their jobs", but in reality it's only relative. They love their jobs, when compared to other jobs. If you don't have to work, there are lots of other things to do out there.
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So I'm curious...anybody have any good tips about figuring ouw what job you would love? I ponder it day and night and I can't figure it out.
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Do you want to work for Google? (Score:5, Insightful)
if you have a family and they are first in your life above anything else(including work), want to save and not throw money away on outrageous housing costs and want privacy without having to drive one hour one way to work then google is not the place for you even if you could get a job there.
more people are figuring out that they dont want to work 50 or 60 hours a week because they want to do other things, stay healthy and just have a life outside of work. most people dont want to work where they feel like they live in China and Japan, where workers typically work 70 hour weeks, but of course their country works and thats all it does, yet where is the reward? It's hard to enjoy rewards in life that you earn if you are too busy working. Our culture has turned into the mindset slowly and on a different scale of china. that to be successful we have to work all the time and nothing else comes before it, including family. I am not sure where or when this trend started.
there is a reason why we have weekends and a reason why most people dont work more than 40 hours a week. its to take a breather from work so we can refresh. its also a reason that people have burnout and productivity decreases. In google's case there are enough people that want to work for them that have the mindset that google is their life and that is why google provides things like laundromats, bringing your pets to work, 3 gourmet meals and swimming pools. if people just wanted to go home for lunch and promptly go home after 5 or 6 pm then what would the need be to offer all these ameneties? think about that one for a moment.
I know that they have offices in NYC and Seattle as well as sporatic jobs here and there but NYC and Seattle is the same as Simi Valley/Mountain View -- that is heavy traffic, no privacy(unless you want to drive 1 hour one way to work), up to the sky housing costs and taxes and living in a culture where everyone wants to work their whole life and thus they think their employees should have the same attitude. Trying to not to sound too stereotypical i am sure there are other smaller places in these areas that at least offer stable working conditions.
In Seattle's case i dont know how in the world all these tech companies keep people in that area. Traffic is still heavy but most of all for me i just cant bear the thought of at most 3 months of sunshine and cold rainy winters. I was there in november 2 years ago and the sun did come out 2 days out of the week(the rest of the week it was raining) but you still couldnt see the sun because it was so overcast. Maybe theres a reason why it's the #1 suicidal city in the country.
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My wife's cousin and her husband from California came to our wedding in September of 2005. In November of 2005 they moved here to get away from California's housing market, traffic, and to give themselves a better chan
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Do you live to work, or do you work to live?
Sounds like the ex-Google employees in question have decided the latter. Good for them!
Re:Do you want to work for Google? (Score:5, Informative)
Try not to generalize so much. You simply make a fool of yourself.
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Sincerly,
Your boss
Re:Do you want to work for Google? (Score:4, Insightful)
Work to live?
Or Live to work?
Personally, I'm glad I don't live full-time in an animal skin tent with a life-expectancy of 30.
But you gotta draw the line somewhere.
Unfortunately, everybody's got a different idea of where that line should be.
Some people have no idea where their line should be.
Some people are perfectly happy living to work, and working 70hr weeks as a result. It's not my place to criticise such people, but only as long as they don't criticise my line of 40hrs.
So the point is - find your line. And draw it.
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how many couples walking on the sidewalks do you see? or people walking their dogs?
Quite a large number, generally while my wife and I are out walking our dog.
if you have a family and they are first in your life above anything else(including work), want to save and not throw money away on outrageous housing costs and want privacy without having to drive one hour one way to work then google is not the place for you even if you could get a job there.
Actually, I'm married, consider my family more important than my job, am saving for a house (and in the meantime paying barely more than I did the last place I lived), and bike to work in about 15 minutes, or drive in ten.
more people are figuring out that they dont want to work 50 or 60 hours a week because they want to do other things, stay healthy and just have a life outside of work.
Sounds like me. I only work about 40 hours a week. I'm in the office a few hours more tha
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Mostly because Seattle weather isn't actually quite as bad as the mythology about Seattle weather would have you think. (And the summers, while short, are truly glorious.)
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I grew up in the South - FL, GA, NC, and spent 4 years stationed in Charleston, SC. I probably far more aware than you of what constitutes 'summertime' in the South - and it sure as heck isn't 9 months of the year with 300+ days of sun.
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Seriously the weather here is not as bad as legend would have you believe - it does get cold and wet, but that considerably balanced by the days that are glorious and the views you can get. Driving around where I live (near Seattle) it's impossible to avoid views of the
You don't know what you're talking about (Score:3, Informative)
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That said, Will was amazing and is missed. He had left before I had a chance to work for him and he is admired like crazy.
Chris
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Google would make a good hitman (Score:2, Funny)
Sounds like Google is becoming bureaucratic :( (Score:2)
I just hope that Google's management is careful about managing it's growth, and doesn't allow the bean counters to take over and end the era of free gourmet lunches and tim
The real story.... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Five thousand shares of GOOG at a five dollar strike price would have a current face value of $2,473,600.
The next time you're going to present an argument based upon completely made up numbers, you might want to make up some that, y'know, actually support your argument.
Nothing compares with freedom (Score:2)
But you need money to get there, it's the truth. Live below your means and you will get there. Live above your means and you never will, no matter how much you make.
What about the other 600,000 starving programmers (Score:3, Insightful)
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I hope you are being sarcastic. If you aren't, you obviously have no understanding of the financial markets. In that case, I have a friend in Nigeria that I'd like for you to meet.
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Google is the new Übersoft .. (Score:2)
Yea, Google is the new Übersoft [ubersoft.net]
"I'm just pondering here not seriously implying anything, but that sounds similiar to something MS did with OS's and media players/browsers etc"
Considering people have a choice as to what search engine to use and Google don't have a desktop monopoly I don't think it is at all similar. No doubt once Microsoft embed search directly in the apps that anomaly will soon be corre
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You're not wrong exactly, but there was a lot more to what Microsoft did than just bundling and dumping. They carried out any number of anticompetitive practices from literally paying magazine review authors to write favorable reviews about their crap to putting delay loops into the published APIs that literally do nothing else but wrap around the internal APIs with which Microsoft developed software.
So far Google has been known to PLAY WELL WITH OTHERS - they are very much interested in supporting stan
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yes, and they provide APIs which can be used by search engines and office software developers, too. Sorry I didn't give specific enough examples for you.
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Linky?
Re:Unemployment? (Score:5, Interesting)
In addition to adverstising, they make their money selling their services to other providers and businesses. Google is not merely a link aggregator but more a service provider. Think Apple. Yes, they sell an operating system but they really make their money on the hardware.
Google is actually a very good business and your surprise at them still being in business, well, let's just say I wouldn't give you my money to invest.
The advertising market didn't collapse per se (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Unemployment? (Score:4, Informative)
Even then, I agree that it's a bit odd that they're as high afloat as they are right now, but I think that if things start going sour, they do have respectable and consistently innovative search technologies that they could apply to any number of pay-for products or services (kind of like pre-AOL Netscape did, although not that well, when the browser wars made their flagship browser go freeware-- selling server software and other such things on the reputation of their free products).
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How does Google stay in business by offering so much of their stuff for free?
They are in the business of selling eyeballs, not search results or email services or... The latter are simply the costs of acquiring eyeballs.
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They don't give anything away. They sell advertising.
Google sells you. They no more give away their products than a rancher gives away food to his herd.
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If advertising on google didn't work, people wouldn't buy ads. However, the advertising does work, so Google makes Gobs of Cash.
Re:Unemployment? (Score:5, Insightful)
I can promise you that a lot more than 100 people have made millions off of Google. Their stock has gone nuts, there's many billions of dollars to go around. Just one billion dollars divided by 100 people is 10 million each. A million dollars is a lot of money to an individual person, but for these big corporations, that is not an unsual amount of money at all.
Re:Unemployment? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Yet I was a backline support technician, making a base salary of about $65k/yr.
Due to mistakes in judgment, bad investments (I invested in a construction company, and the guy ran it into the ground), and tax laws, I am no longer a millionaire (though I am in a nice house right now).
Let me tell you this: being a millionaire is nothing. You can lose it all overnight. And even when you have it, there's a great temptation to spend it, a
Re:Unemployment? (Score:5, Insightful)
Money doesn't make you rich, perceived lack thereof makes you poor. I know many people with far more money than I that complain about money far more than I. If you can afford to put food on the table, a roof over your head and not live in fear for your life, health or well-being, it is hard to justify a claim of 'poor'.
No, I'm not the guy who sold his house and cars to live poor on purpose, we're just a young family starting out. A big problem, especially here in the States, seems to be that if you are not able to consume everything your heart desires that you are poor and living without. If that describes you, I strongly suggest you spend some time determining what really makes you happy and focus on that.
Sorry for the rant, but those of us that live a bit below the 'living wage' (here in Utah I'd have to make a few thousand more a year to be at it) are tired of hearing about how people that make a multiple of what we do are 'poor.'
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And I define it as;
Having a relatively secure financial future.
If you can afford to put food on the table, a roof over your head and not live in fear for your life, health or well-being, it is hard to justify a claim of 'poor'.
Hunter-gatherer societies could do this. As long as they accepted a certain standard of living, primitive (and I don't intend to use the word disparagingly here) humans really never had to worry about becoming home
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$50M? Cmon now, that really depends on what you see as your needs. This is staight out of my butt, but let's say you want to continue your lifestyle of $65k/year. Supposing you can buy a house own it outright, a principle of $1.5M in a low-risk type of investment would yield you $65k/year while still leaving enough growth to account for inflation of your lifetime. With no mortgage, your expenses are much reduce
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Re: Wealth (Score:2)
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Thus, a person living in the jungle alone is free and not dependent on society but is not rich because they still cannot buy anything that society produces.
A person is rich, however, if is able to escape a country in war although the currency has been devalued and become worthless, or is able to live quite well during a financial crisis when other peop
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But then, if you dipped into your money to put down a payment on a house, that'd effectively lower your income, because you'd have less to make interest off of.
So you could put it into stocks... say you had 1MM in the market, and
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Listen vairy carefully, I will say zis only once...
The GP was right, except for a slight mistake re: $25 vs $30.
Here endeth the lesson.
I just hope I d
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