Goodbye, iGoogle. We hardly knew thee.
Well, no, that's a bit of an invention, as Google's personalized home page ran for a good eight years or so before Google officially pulled the plug on the service yesterday.
Before you bemoan that your personalized page is no more, it's not as if Google's axe swung without fair warning. The company announced in July of last year that iGoogle would officially be put out to pasture on November 1 of this year. Lo and behold, the site is officially no more — hitting up the traditional iGoogle address (google.com/ig) now just transfers you over to plain ol' Google dot com.
"We originally launched iGoogle in 2005 before anyone could fully imagine the ways that today's web and mobile apps would put personalized, real-time information at your fingertips. With modern apps that run on platforms like Chrome and Android, the need for iGoogle has eroded over time, so we'll be winding it down," wrote Google general managerMatt Eichner at the time.
Google didn't make any kind of formal announcement yesterday prior to shutting down the service. Its departure is the second somewhat major Google service — at least, one of Google's more well-known services — that the company has canned this year. The personalized Google start page now joins Google Reader in the services graveyard, the latter having been killed off this past July.
Google's somewhat infrequent "cleanings" of the services it offers do occasionally come as a bit of a surprise to those who feel that some services, regardless of their popularity, should persist within Google's panoply of offerings. At the very least, it's thought that they could have the potential to bolster Google's higher-profile services.
"I suspect that it survived for some time after being put into maintenance because they believed it could still be a useful source of content into G+. Reader users were always voracious consumers of content, and many of them filtered and shared a great deal of it," wrote Brian Shih, former Google Reader product manager, in a Quora comment this past March.
Via: PCMAG
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