The posting about the logo on Hacker News states that it’s using an HTML/JavaScript particle simulator. Further, one comment notes that “the particles are divs styled with border-radius and position:absolute.”
A few other interesting notes:
- If you move the browser window around, the balls also move. These movements are based on the direction you move the window.
- If you have a custom background installed on your Google homepage, you’ll see a blue-red-yellow-green grid of dots next to the Google logo — clicking on this will take you to the regular white Google homepage where you’ll see the dots in action.
- When you click back to the Google.com after being away, the dots recognize that.
A number of people are noting they can’t see the logo, so you should try visiting the U.S. or British versions of Google to see it.
Sean Percival also made the video below of the logo in action.
As for what the logo means, that’s still is up in the air. Some think it’s a way for Google to show you if your browser is out of date. Others think it’s some sort of birthday logo (Google was incorporated on September 4, 1998, but their exact birthday varies).
Update: Google’s Matt Cutts tweets that the logo may indeed require a “modern browser.”
0 0 9 9
Authors: MG Siegler