Job description
Google || Minimum Qualifications:
Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science or other technical field or equivalent practical experience.
Experience programming in Java/J2EE and web services (e.g. RESTful/ SOAP).
Experience implementing, configuring, customizing and integrating third party software solutions.
Preferred Qualifications:
- Experience in fullstack development using one or more of the following technologies: Application/Web Server, JBoss/Tomcat, IIS-ASP.NET, JavaScript/AngularJS, Python, relational databases.
- Experience participating in the full software development lifecycle (e.g., analysis, design, build, test, implementation, support).
- Solid knowledge of information management, data modeling, systems integration, development methodology (including unit testing), and web technologies.
About the position
Lead all aspects of web development, requirements gathering, software development, testing, documentation, training, implementation, ongoing support and maintenance for both internal and
customer-facing web applications. You will work closely with a cross-functional team of Googlers using UI and functional specifications/prototypes as input. You will be empowered to act like an owner, take action and innovate to meet user and customer needs.
In this role, you will have a significant, positive impact on the transformation of Google ASCII. You will innovate, design and build access and identity management, develop and implement rich delivery capabilities, and contribute to other technical tasks.
About the Google Company
Google is currently the first name that comes to mind when entering the online world. Almost everyone who uses the Internet is familiar with the word and uses it in various ways, but relatively few know what Google actually is.
In reality, Google is a multinational technology company that provides users with free services and goods related to the Internet. Online advertising techniques, cloud computing for search, software, hardware, etc.
The history of Google in brief
In January 1996, Larry Page and Sergey Brin founded Google. Both were still doctoral students at Stanford College at the time. At that time the company was still called Google, the two doctoral students called it a search engine in their study. The term Googol is the precursor of Google. This search engine was based on comparing two related websites. Originally, Stanford College used this search engine, which was hosted on the institution’s main website.
Foundation of Google
One of the founders of Sun Microsystems, Andy Bechelshim, provided the initial funding for Google. It received this funding when Google had no market presence and was not making money. After he realised the success of the company, three other “angel investors” asked for funding.
These three angel investors were David Cheriton, a physics professor at Stanford University, Ram Sriram, an entrepreneur, and Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon.com. Following these investments in late 1998 and early 1999, Google received $25 million in funding on July 7, 1999.
There were several investors in this capital raise. Venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Cofield & Byers and (Sequoia Capita) Sequoia Capita were two of those key investors.
Google Data Centre
A data centre is the space formed by multiple machines to store and analyse a large amount of information. It is also important to point out that the Google Data Centre looks like a large underground campus with massive disc drives, computer racks, internal and external network infrastructure, cooling systems and various applications.
Yes, Google has built numerous of these data centers around the world. Jackson County, Council Bluffs, Berkeley County, Douglas County, Douglas County, Lenoir, Mays County, Dallas, Henderson, Montgomery County and Reno all have Google centers in North America.
Evaluating the company’s total number of data centres in such a case is extremely difficult because it has increased significantly. Google’s data centre architecture now includes various servers. These include user-facing web servers, data collection servers in the form of web spiders, spell servers, index servers, and a separate ad server for advertisements.
Only a tiny minority of Google employees have knowledge of these data centers. However, Google is constantly providing information about the security of its users. You now need to know where Google’s data centers are located and what their general purpose is.