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1. Data: 2005-10-05 13:01:43
Temat: Fwd: How I got to Google, ch. 1
Od: Tomasz Płókarz <t...@x...xn--p-ela.hahahaha.>
Taka ciekawa ciekawostka dla ciekawskich - słyszałem, że Google szuka w
Polsce ludzi do roboty :)
------- Treść oryginalnej wiadomości -------
Od: "A Googler" <>
Do:
Temat: How I got to Google, ch. 1
Data: Wed, 05 Oct 2005 01:49:49 +0200
Posted by Michael Krantz, Google Blog Team
-- via craigslist, and thanks for asking. Our engineers, though, tend to
come by
more varied, and occasionally odder, routes. Some get recruited out of grad
school, or by friends or former colleagues. Others just send their resumes
to
j...@g...com. For a few engineers, though, the path has been more
interesting.
Peter Bradshaw, for instance, built "a music playing system based on
printed
cards with barcodes and webcams. Includes lego!" (No, I don't know what
that
means, either.) Over the next few weeks, we're going to post some of their
stories.
Like this one, from Systems Administrator Aaron Joyner:
My story started when I came into work one morning and was unable to look
up
something on Google. Being the sysadmin for my company at the time, it was
my
responsibility to resolve the problem, so I started poking around. It
turned out
that our DNS server [ed: all the jargony stuff you'll hear in this anecdote
refers to the software that websites use to connect and talk to each
other] was
returning an error when trying to look up google.com, specifically a server
failure error. Just as I'd convinced myself that it wasn't our problem but
Google's, the problem suddenly resolved itself. I promptly forgot about it
and
went back to my regular work.
But then I came in the next morning and had exactly the same problem, so I
started looking at Google's DNS responses very closely. It became clear
that the
specific combination of delegations and glue records they were returning
[ed:
see note above] would result in an eventual error approximately once per
day,
and this would then take it about five minutes to give up and try again.
Not
entirely convinced that I should point the finger at Google yet, I posted a
message to my local Linux Users Group asking if anyone had had problems
with
resolving google.com addresses and got a couple "Yeah, I did have a
problem like
that once recently" responses.
Thus reinforced, I headed over to Google.com, found the "Contact Us" page
and
the "Report a problem" link, chunked in a brief problem description and a
link
to the archived copy of the long technical description from that same
mailing
list thread, and thought to myself, "Gee, I'll never hear about that
again." But
then one afternoon a week later I get an email that said, basically, "We've
received your problem report, and forwarded it on to the appropriate
department,
if they need any further information they'll contact you. Thanks." Again, I
thought, "Gee, how nice. I'll never hear about that again."
But that evening I got an email from Dave Presotto (the guy who wrote the
DNS
server for Plan9) saying that he was looking into it and would get back to
me.
Forty-five minutes later I got another email, this one describing how he
believed they had accidentally fixed the problem earlier in the week due to
general code cleanup, and asking what I thought of the solution. After I
recovered my senses and stopped bouncing around the room, I had a few email
exchanges with Dave, in the course of which I asked casually if they
needed any
good sysadmins out in Mountain View. He referred me, and the rest is
history.
http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2005/10/how-i-got-to-
google-ch-1.html
--
W powietrzu wisi coś podłego | Irracjonalne jakieś zło
Ma się ochotę na jednego | I prawdę mówiąc, tylko to
Czas na mały blues...
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2. Data: 2005-10-05 17:58:03
Temat: Re: Fwd: How I got to Google, ch. 1
Od: Dariusz Jaworski <d...@s...waw.pl>
Tomasz Płókarz wrote:
> Taka ciekawa ciekawostka dla ciekawskich - słyszałem, że Google szuka w
> Polsce ludzi do roboty :)
Ta, sprzedawców, bo kogo innego im trzeba :)
--
Dariusz Jaworski
PGP key fingerprint: 9FBC7DB3D28AB181F1838C321ACFDD74 / id: 6438E6C1