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  1. Paul T. Buchheit (born November 7, 1977) is an American computer engineer and entrepreneur who created the email service Gmail. He developed the original prototype of Google AdSense as part of his work on Gmail.

  2. Paul Buchheit is a Group Partner at YC and the creator of GMail. While at Google he also built the prototype for AdSense and came up with Google's famous slogan “Don't be evil.” In 2007 he was one of the founders of Friendfeed, which in 2009 became Facebook's largest acquisition to date.

  3. Apr 1, 2014 · Paul Buchheit, Gmails creator, disabused me of this notion. From the very beginning, “it was an official charge,” he says. “I was supposed to build an email thing.”

  4. Oct 29, 2021 · More than 30 years after this breakthrough, a Google engineer named Paul Buchheit conducted his own email experiments. In a 2005 blog post, Paul described the problem he was trying to solve:

  5. In this episode of The Social Radars, Jessica Livingston and Carolynn Levy talk to Paul Buchheit, a Group Partner at YC and the creator of Gmail.

  6. Aug 24, 2018 · How Gmail happened: The inside story, as revealed by creator Paul Buchheit. The following is an interview from Founders at Work: Stories of Startups’ Early Days by Jessica Livingston. The ...

  7. Jun 1, 2017 · Jasper Kuria of Capital & Growth interviewed YC Partner Paul Buchheit about his experience as employee #23 at Google and his key investing insights.

  8. Paul Buchheit was Googles 23rd employee. He was the creator and lead developer of Gmail, Google’s web-based email system, which anticipated most aspects of what is now called Web 2.0.

  9. Sep 7, 2023 · This interview is from 2018, and a few years later there was an absurd boom and crash of cryptocurrencies, where billions of dollars of "value" were created out of thin air in the markets, and then billions more vanished just as quickly. That's very exciting, I agree.

  10. In Part 2, Professor DePaolis comments on ideological fervor and income inequality in response to Paul Buchheits theory that ‘wealthy people don’t deserve their wealth.’

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