On Saturday, the Google homepage went on a short, pleasant time-travel trip — the search giant swapped its modern masthead for the very first Google logo from 1998, a vintage, pixel-warm reminder of the company’s scrappy early days. The retro logo appeared as today’s Google Doodle in a number of countries and it’s the kind of small, public wink that has become part of how Google marks the calendar.
A Google Doodle is, at heart, a decorative tweak: an artistic, temporary reworking of the logo that marks holidays, anniversaries, people, cultural moments and the occasional joke. The Doodle for the 27th birthday is literal nostalgia — it lifts the original, blocky 1998 wordmark and puts it where millions of people see it every hour, turning an ordinary search box into a tiny museum case for a moment. The Doodle team has been doing this since the beginning: the first Doodle started as an “out-of-office” note the founders left when they visited Burning Man, and the first international Doodle showed up for Bastille Day in 2000.
Why September 27? (Because dates in tech are weird)
There’s a little calendar folklore around Google’s birthday. Page and Brin started the research project that became Google while at Stanford in the mid-1990s; the company was incorporated in early September 1998, and the founders have used a few dates over the years to mark the company’s origin. For many years, Google celebrated on September 4, but the company settled on September 27 as the official anniversary — a date Google now uses for its annual birthday Doodle. It’s a reminder that founding dates aren’t always tidy, especially for organizations that begin as a grad-school project and slowly turn into a company.
When Larry Page and Sergey Brin began tinkering with what they called “BackRub,” they were trying to solve a modest but stubborn problem: how do you find the most relevant pages in a web that was doubling in size every few months? The answer — PageRank, a way of using links like citations — was a quiet technical breakthrough that turned into one of the defining products of the internet era. What followed is now familiar: a move out of the dorm and garage, a stream of new products (Gmail, Maps, Photos, Chrome) and, more recently, a push to bake AI into everything with models and tools under the Gemini name. The trajectory — search to services to AI — is the through-line you see when a retro logo meets the latest product feed.
There’s something clever about bringing the old logo back for a birthday: it’s brief, inexpensive, and it does layered work. For everyday users, it’s a small, charming surprise. For brand watchers, it’s a gentle lesson in continuity — a reminder that behind the years of acquisitions, experiments and occasional controversies, there was a simple, useful tool that became a habit. Doodles do more than mark dates; they keep corporate memory lightweight and public, and they let a company narrate its own past in a friendly voice.
A quick timeline, because timelines are soothing
- 1995–1997: Larry Page and Sergey Brin meet at Stanford; research project called BackRub evolves into Google.
- 1998: The company is incorporated and the first playful Doodle appears as an out-of-office note. Over the next few years, Google moves out of beta and begins building other products.
- 2004 onward: Gmail, Maps, Chrome and a raft of services expand Google’s footprint; the brand becomes a verb in many languages.
- 2023–2025: Google folds increasingly capable AI models into Search and other products under the Gemini umbrella, marking the company’s current chapter.
The point of marking a birthday like this
Corporate birthdays are rarely about cake and candles; they’re about narrative. For users, this Doodle is a neat, visual nudge that the internet has a history and that the tools we use every day were once tiny experiments. For Google, the vintage logo does something more pragmatic: it softens the story around a company that is deeply technical and often politically entangled. A nostalgic Doodle lets the company be human for a minute — playful, self-referential, and grateful in the language of curated throwbacks.
So yes: Google turned 27, and for a few hours the homepage looked like a scrapbook page. That’s the charm. Small, public rituals like this are part of how tech firms keep their origin stories alive — and how billions of people, for a second, remember what the internet felt like when the world still dialed in.
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