2006
January
* Our first Code Jam in China concludes in Beijing. The winner, graduate student Chuan Xu, is one of more than 13,000 registrants.
* We announce the acquisition of dMarc, a digital radio advertising company.
* Google.cn, a local domain version of Google, goes live in China.
* We introduce Picasa in 25 more languages, including Polish, Thai and Vietnamese.
February
* We release Chat in Gmail, using the instant messaging tools from Google Talk.
* Eric Schmidt is inducted into the National Academy of Engineering.
* Dr. Larry Brilliant becomes the executive director of Google.org, our philanthropic arm.
* Google News for mobile launches.
March
* We announce the acquisition of Writely, a web-based word processing application that subsequently becomes the basis for Google Docs.
* A team working from Mountain View, Bangalore and New York collaborates to create Google Finance, our approach to an improved search experience for financial information.
April
* For April Fool's we unveil a new product, Google Romance: "Dating is a search problem."
* We launch Google Calendar, complete with sharing and group features.
* We release Maps for France, Germany, Italy and Spain.
May
* We release Google Trends, a way to visualize the popularity of searches over time.
June
* We announce Picasa Web Albums, allowing your to upload and share your photos online.
* The Oxford English Dictionary (OED) adds "Google" as a verb.
* We announce Google Checkout, a fast and easy way to pay for online purchases.
* Gmail, Google News and iGoogle become available on mobile phones in eight more languages besides English: French, Italian, German, Spanish, Dutch, Russian, Chinese and Turkish.
* Gmail launches in Arabic and Hebrew, bringing the number of interfaces up to 40.
July
* At Google Code Jam Europe, nearly 10,000 programmers from 31 countries compete at Google Dublin for the top prizes; Tomasz Czajka from Poland wins the final round.
August
* We launch free citywide WiFi in Mountain View.
* More than 100 libraries on 10 campuses of the University of California join the Google Books Library Project.
* Star Trek's 40th Anniversary Convention in Las Vegas features a Google booth showcasing tools appropriate for intergalactic use.
* Apps for Your Domain, a suite of applications designed for organizations of all sizes, and including including Gmail and Calendar, is released.
* Google Book Search begins offering free PDF downloads of books in the public domain.
September
* We add an archive search to Google News, with more than 200 years of historical articles.
* Featured Content for Google Earth includes overlays from the UN Environmental Program, Discovery Networks, the Jane Goodall Institute, and the National Park Service.
* The University Complutense of Madrid becomes the first Spanish-language library to join the Google Books Library Project.
October
* Together with LitCam and UNESCO's Institute for Lifelong Learning, we launch the Literacy Project, offering resources for teachers, literacy groups and anyone interested in reading promotion.
* We announce our acquisition of YouTube.
* We release web-based applications Docs & Spreadsheets: Word processor Docs is a reworking of Writely (acquired in March).
* Google Custom Search Engine launches, giving bloggers and website owners the ability to create a search engine tailored to their own interests.
* We acquire JotSpot, a collaborative wiki platform, which later becomes Google Sites.
November
* The first nationwide Doodle 4 Google contest in the U.K. takes place with the theme My Britain. More than 15,000 kids in Britain enter, and 13-year old Katherine Chisnall is chosen to have her doodle displayed on
www.google.co.uk. There have been Doodle 4 Google contests in several other years and countries since.
December
* We release Patent Search in the U.S., indexing more than 7 million patents dating back to 1790.
2007
January
* We announce a partnership with China Mobile, the world's largest mobile telecom carrier, to provide mobile and Internet search services in China.
February
* We release Google Maps in Australia, complete with local business results and mobile capability.
* Google Docs & Spreadsheets is available in eleven more languages: French, Italian, German, Spanish, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Korean, Turkish, Polish, Dutch, Portuguese (Brazil) and Russian.
* For Valentine's Day, we open up Gmail to everyone. (Previously, it was available by invitation only).
* Google Apps Premier Edition launches, bringing cloud computing to businesses.
* The Candidates@Google series kicks off with Senator Hillary Clinton, the first of several 2008 Presidential candidates, including Senator Barack Obama and Senator John McCain, to visit the Googleplex.
* We introduce traffic information to Google Maps for more than 30 cities around the US.
March
* Our first Latin American software coding contest ends with Fábio Dias Moreira of Brazil taking the grand prize. He scored more points than 5,000 other programmers from all over the continent.
* We sign partnerships to give free access to Google Apps for Education to 70,000 university students in Kenya and Rwanda.
April
* This April Fool's Day is extra busy: not only do we introduce the Gmail Paper Archive and TiSP (Toilet Internet Service Provider) -- we lose (and find) a real snake in our New York office!
* We add eight more languages to Blogger, bringing the total to 19.
May
* In partnership with the Growing Connection, we plant a vegetable garden in the middle of the Googleplex, the output of which is incorporated into our café offerings.
* We move into permanent space in Ann Arbor, Michigan and Governor Jennifer Granholm helps us celebrate. The office is an AdWords support site.
* At our Searchology event, we announce new strides taken towards universal search. Now video, news, books, image and local results are all integrated together in one search result.
* Google Hot Trends launches, listing the current 100 most active queries, showing what people are searching for at the moment.
* Street View debuts in Google Maps in five U.S. cities: New York, San Francisco, Las Vegas, Miami, and Denver.
* On Developer Day, we announce Google Gears (now known just as Gears), an open source technology for creating offline web applications.
June
* Google Maps gets prime placement on the original Apple iPhone.
* YouTube becomes available in nine more domains: Brazil, France, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Ireland and the U.K.
* We announce a partnership with Salesforce.com, combining that company's on-demand CRM applications with AdWords.
* We unveil several "green" initiatives: RechargeIT, aimed at accelerating the adoption of plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, the completion of our installation of solar panels at the Googleplex, in Mountain View, and our intention to be completely carbon-neutral by the end of 2007. We also announce the Climate Savers Computing Initiative, in collaboration with Intel, Dell, and more than 30 other companies.
* Google Earth Outreach is introduced, designed to help nonprofit organizations use Google Earth to advocate their causes.
July
* We announce the acquisition of Postini.
* The first CNN/YouTube debate takes place between the eight U.S. Democratic Presidential candidates. (The Republicans get their turn in November 2007.)
* Google Finance becomes available for non-U.S. markets for the first time, in Canada.
* Google Apps is now available in 28 languages.
August
* We ask your for you interpretation of how Gmail travels around the world, and receive more than 1,100 video responses from more than 65 different countries.
* To infinity and beyond! Sky launches inside Google Earth, including layers for constellation information and virtual tours of galaxies.
September
* AdSense for Mobile is introduced, giving sites optimized for mobile browsers the ability to host the same ads as standard websites.
* Together with the X PRIZE Foundation we announce the Google Lunar X PRIZE, a robotic race to the Moon for a $30 million prize purse.
* We add Presently, a new application for making slide presentations, to Google Docs.
* Google Reader becomes available in French, Italian, German, Spanish, Dutch, English (U.K.), Chinese (Traditional and Simplified), Japanese and Korean.
October
* We partner with IBM on a supercomputing initiative so that students can learn to work at Internet scale on computing challenges.
November
* We announce OpenSocial, a set of common APIs for developers to build applications for social networks.
* Android, the first open platform for mobile devices, and a collaboration with other companies in the Open Handset Alliance, is announced. Soon after, we introduce the $10 million Android Developer Challenge.
* Google.org announces RE<C, an initiative designed to create electricity from renewable sources that are cheaper than coal. The initial focus is on support for solar thermal power and wind power technologies.
December
* The Queen of England launches The Royal Channel on YouTube. She is the first monarch to establish a video presence this way.