Those two acquisitions jump-started the Santa Monica expansion, which Douglas Merrill, Google's vice president of engineering and chief information officer, said was further stoked by the region's entertainment and media industries and a steady flow of top technical talent from local universities.
"We have an unusual approach to engineering," Merrill said. "We go anywhere in the world, find the best talent and build an office around them. That gives us access to an incredible talent pool."
Today, Santa Monica staffers are deployed on all kinds of projects to improve the results people get when they search for something on the Internet, including an experiment in how to enhance the rating system for YouTube, the popular video-sharing site Google bought last year.
"It's a great fit. And we are definitely willing to fly down to ensure close communication," said Hunter Walk, YouTube's director of product management in San Bruno, Calif.
Google is known for its freewheeling culture, which was on display in Santa Monica when the surfboard behind the reception desk in the main lobby went missing. Managers got a note from an unidentified prankster using the e-mail address surfboard@google.com: "Hey everyone, just wanted to let you guys know I went on vacation." Attached was a photo of the surfboard lounging in a hammock just blocks away in another Google building.
The Santa Monica staff is eclectic. There's an Academy Award winner for technical achievement, a former Jet Propulsion Lab employee who worked on NASA's Cassini spacecraft and an experimental poet.
That poet, Andrew "Max" Maxwell, 35, is also a former art cinema operator, pamphleteer and bullfight promoter (for the French board of tourism) who joined Applied Semantics in May 1999 on a short stopover in Los Angeles on his way to a graduate program in sound art at the Art Institute of Chicago. His letter of introduction in response to an ad for a lexicographer consisted exclusively of anagrams and palindromes. Currently he is teaching robots to read, part of a Google project to automate how text and Web pages are classified and summarized.
"Google has a reputation for hiring crack coders riding unicycles, but now we have people who are medical researchers, geologists, computational finance types, professors," Maxwell said. "It feels like a center of culture as much as a center of commerce. It's a small utopia."
Many say this is the work environment they've long sought. Senior software engineer Rob Konigsberg, 38, appreciates the caliber of the work and the company of his terrier mix, Maggie, who guards his office door and accompanies him on daily walks.
"You spend more time here but you like where you are," said Konigsberg, who has worked for Google three years. "It doesn't feel like coming to work. You do the stuff you would be doing at home anyway."
And you are doing it with people you like and who are like you, said Jane Chiu, 26, a Google engineer who works on YouTube. "I felt out of place during college," she said, "but now I am surrounded by like-minded people."
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jessica.guynn@latimes.com