The future ain't what it used to be

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In 1990, I was honored with a GE Coolidge Fellowship, the highest scientific honor at the GE Corporate Research and Development Laboratory(CRD). At that point I had been at GE for 12 years after 10 years in the Watervliet Arsenal Research Lab. I had 22 years of experience in computer graphics and software engineering.

In 1995 I was able to spend six months at Stanford as part of my Coolidge Award (see for background).

My visit to the Stanford Graphics Lab was a great opportunity to share my experience with the young graduate students and, more importantly, to stimulate and rejuvenate me.

I spent a lot of time interacting with the students and exploring the, then new, Internet. I created a number of web pages at Stanford that were related to Marching Cubes, Decimation and the Visible Human Project. The Visible Human web pages were very popular. As a guest at Stanford, I was a bit embarrassed that my Visible Human pages were getting many more internet hits that any other Stanford Graphics Lab pages.

Due, in part to my Internet interests, I met a young Masters student you was working on a new way to search for web pages. At this time, there was Yahoo, which was really an index of web pages, not a search engine. There was Inktomi, a search engine developed at Berkeley, and Altavista. Altavista was a great search engine and dominated most searches on the internet. This Masters student described how his search engine differed from the simple keyword search of Altavista and Inktomi. His engine ordered the returned searches depending on the "popularity" of the sites.

Here is where my recollection of the details may be fuzzy. I either told him or thought that I should tell him, "Why waste time on a search engine when we already have Altavista"?

Fast-forward 6 months. I'm back at GE. A colleague, Chris, comes to my office to ask a question about some new technology. I say, "No problem, we'll look it up on Altavista". Chris says, "You're still using Altavista? I use Google."

My reaction was, "Oh no, not Google".

The Masters student was Larry Page.

So much for experience...