I am a big fan of  Google because whenever I use Google to search anything, to confirm anything, to know about something, it helps me a lot. Google guides me in an easy way and therefore I don’t need any tutor or teacher or to take help from other in free of cost. Infact I teach people after studying from Google.




 Google has had many logos but the current official Google logo is a word mark based on the Catull typeface and was designed by Ruth Kedar. This company has many modifications and/or humorous features like cartoon modifications of their logo for use on birthdays of famous people, holidays and big events. Some of these special logos are designed by Dennis Hwang and now known as Google Doodles.

To the Burning Man Festival of 1998, the first Google Doodle was a reference and was designed by Sergey Brin and Larry Page, to notify users of their absence in case the servers crashed. After Larry and Sergey, Dennis Hwang (an outside contractor) was asked to design a logo for Bastille Day in 2000, although he had not been hired to do anything remotely related to logo design. But, Hwang has been designing the Google Doodles ever since.

Google doodles have been produced for many famous artist’s and scientist’s birthdays. They are also used to depict major events at Google. On the occasion of Valentine’s Day, February 14, 2007, the Google doodle had featured a chocolate-dipped strawberry that combined the second “g” and the “l” as its green stem.  This design gave the appearance that the “l” was missing, thereby displaying “Googe”.

What doodles will be doing next? Well, I have no idea. One thing I like most about Google is that this is the kind of company that, when a user writes in to suggest that they honor the once in every122-years Transit of Venus on their home page, they actually do it. Wow!!