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"Sarah Palin" searched on Google 2001. (via flea in the comments)
(4) # 10/2/2008
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Google 2001: search the Google index as it existed in its early days. This was back when a search for "crazymonk" brought up my posts on Brian's Rumors Daily. (via fimoculous)
(11) # 10/1/2008
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Top 15 Google Street View sightings. I'm quite familiar with the truck depicted in #8 -- a fleet of eight or so of them would pass by my window every evening like clockwork when I was working for Nevada's Question 7 campaign. (thx, sean)
(2) # 6/1/2007
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Want to drive down the Las Vegas Strip on your computer? Google's new Street View will let you. It's only up for select roads in select cities (e.g., SF, LV, NYC), but it's pretty freaky/cool.
(8) # 5/29/2007
Google mail hiccup
I just got an email from myself on my gmail account that I never actually sent. The subject is a seven digit number and the body a three digit number. (I won't divulge them in case it involves a security flaw.) Thinking it could be a Google-wide hiccup, I asked my officemate if he had received the same. He has, with different numbers. Anyone else get one of these? And if so, any idea what happened?
Google's Da Vinci Code Contest, Revisited
Darn. I tore through 4 of the 5 puzzles with great speed, but got stuck on the very first puzzle, the Sudoku challenge. Despite the fact that my only exposure to Sudoku has been through this contest, I had been doing quite well on them. My problem was purely observational; I kept on putting symbols in place that were clearly violating the constraints. Hey, it's hard to keep track of nine weird looking symbols. So in the end, it took me 45-50 minutes to do the whole thing, 95% of that on the Sudoku, which I'm pretty sure is not winner-worthy. That's OK -- I heard the grand prize would've required more than $30,000 of federal taxes.
Google's Da Vinci Code Quest
So, on a whim, I decided to complete some of the puzzles on Google's movie tie-in, the Da Vinci Code Quest. It consisted of 24 puzzles over 24 days -- I did the first 21 bored on a Sunday and finished the rest right after they were released. The first 10,000 participants to finish all 24 were promised a cryptex in the mail and a chance to win some prizes.
Today, in the mail, I got a mysteriously heavy box in the mail from noblecollection.com. Inside was one of the 10,000 winning cryptexes. The code to open the cryptex was written on the box: "GRAIL." I entered it in, and the cryptex opened up. (Is there any way for me to change the code?) A rolled parchment was tucked inside, with the words "Congratulations!" and a URL written upon it. Now I get to partake in a time-sensitive puzzle contest this weekend -- if I complete in the shortest time, I win.
Here are some pictures of the cryptex:

A hokey contest when I first started, yes, but getting the cryptex in the mail was pretty neat.
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Italy and Sicily now have their roads marked on Google Maps. The link goes to a map centered on Pezzolo, the village where my parents grew up. (thx, jmay)
(8) # 5/5/2006
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Hoder, the famous Iranian blogger, was refused entry in the United States after border patrol Googled his blog onsite and learned he was living in New York City. Farsi is the 4th most popular language used on blogs, so the title I gave him is no joke. But I'm glad at least that border patrol is competent enough to use the web effectively.
(6) # 12/8/2005
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Amazon announced two new programs today: Amazon Pages, which allows you to buy any page or chapter of a book, and Amazon Upgrade, which allows you to upgrade a purchase to include an online version of the book. Prices TBA. The announcement was clearly timed to coincide with Google blowing the doors open on Google Print today.
(0) # 11/3/2005

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