Larry Page
लॉरेंस एडवर्ड पेज [३] [४] [५] (जन्म २६ मार्च, १९७३) एक अमेरिकी व्यवसायी, कंप्यूटर वैज्ञानिक और इंटरनेट उद्यमी हैं। उन्हें सर्गेई ब्रिन के साथ Google के सह-संस्थापकों में से एक के रूप में जाना जाता है। [३] [६]
पेज 1997 से अगस्त 2001 तक (एरिक श्मिट के पक्ष में पद छोड़ते हुए) Google के मुख्य कार्यकारी अधिकारी थे, फिर अप्रैल 2011 से जुलाई 2015 तक जब वे अल्फाबेट इंक के सीईओ बने (Google के माता-पिता के रूप में "प्रमुख प्रगति" देने के लिए बनाया गया था) company),[7] एक पद जो उन्होंने ४ दिसंबर, २०१९ तक धारण किया। वह एक अल्फाबेट बोर्ड के सदस्य, कर्मचारी और शेयरधारक को नियंत्रित करने वाले बने हुए हैं।
Google को बनाने से एक महत्वपूर्ण मात्रा में धन का निर्माण हुआ। ब्लूमबर्ग बिलियनेयर्स इंडेक्स के अनुसार, १० अप्रैल, २०२१ तक, पेज की कुल संपत्ति लगभग १०३.७ बिलियन डॉलर है, [१] जिससे वह दुनिया का ६ वां सबसे धनी व्यक्ति बन गया। [१] पेज, पेजरैंक का सह-निर्माता और नाम है, जो Google के लिए एक खोज रैंकिंग एल्गोरिथम है।[16] उन्हें 2004 में सह-लेखक ब्रिन के साथ मार्कोनी पुरस्कार मिला। [17]Some personal details
In 2007, Page married Lucinda Southworth on Necker Island, the Caribbean island owned by Richard Branson.[94] Southworth is a research scientist and the sister of actress and model Carrie Southworth.[95] Page and Southworth have two children, born in 2009 and 2011.[96][97]
On February 18, 2005, Page bought a 9,000 square feet (840 m2) Spanish Colonial Revival architecture house in Palo Alto, California designed by American artistic polymath Pedro Joseph de Lemos, a former curator of the Stanford Art Museum and founder of the Carmel Art Institute, after the historic building had been on the market for years with an asking price of US$7.95 million. A two-story stucco archway spans the driveway and the home features intricate stucco work, as well as stone and tile in California Arts and Crafts movement style built to resemble de Lemos's family's castle in Spain. The Pedro de Lemos House was constructed between 1931 and 1941 by de Lemos.[98][99][100][101][102] It is also on the National Register of Historic Places.[103]
In 2009, Page began purchasing properties and tearing down homes adjacent to his home in Palo Alto to make room for a large ecohouse. The existing buildings were "deconstructed" and the materials donated for reuse. The ecohouse was designed to "minimize the impact on the environment." Page worked with an arborist to replace some trees that were in poor health with others that used less water to maintain. Page also applied for Green Point Certification, with points given for use of recycled and low or no-VOC (volatile organic compound) materials and for a roof garden with solar panels. The house's exterior features zinc cladding and plenty of windows, including a wall of sliding-glass doors in the rear. It includes eco-friendly elements such as permeable paving in the parking court and a pervious path through the trees on the property. The 6,000-square-foot (560m²) house also observes other green home design features such as organic architecture building materials and low volatile organic compound paint.[104][105][106][107]
In 2011, Page bought the $45-million 193-foot (59m) superyacht Senses.[108]
Page announced on his Google+ profile in May 2013 that his right vocal cord is paralyzed from a cold that he contracted the previous summer, while his left cord was paralyzed in 1999.[109] Page explained that he has been suffering from a vocal cord issue for 14 years, and, as of his May 2013 post, doctors were unable to identify the exact cause. The Google+ post also revealed that Page had made a large donation to a vocal-cord nerve-function research program at the Voice Health Institute in Boston. An anonymous source stated that the donation exceeded $20 million.[110]
In October 2013, Business Insider reported that Page's paralyzed vocal cords are caused by an autoimmune disease called Hashimoto's thyroiditis, and prevented him from undertaking Google quarterly earnings conference calls for an indefinite period.[111]
In November 2014, Page's family foundation, the Carl Victor Page Memorial Fund, reportedly holding assets in excess of a billion dollars at the end of 2013, gave $15 million to aid the effort against the Ebola virus epidemic in West Africa. Page wrote on his Google+ page that "My wife and I just donated $15 million ... Our hearts go out to everyone affected."[112][113][114][115]
Comments
Post a Comment