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It's a long way from the famously comfortable, stock-option-granting, lava-lamp-outfitted environment at Google, where Boyapati worked as a software engineer until quitting his job a few weeks ago to support Texas
Boyapati, 29, says he drew on lessons learned while building Google products to create the same kind of distributed volunteer network with the goal of drawing hundreds of Paul volunteers to New Hampshire. His effort's name?
"At Google, when you think about a project, the first thing you think about is how it's going to scale. You don't build it if it won't scale," says Boyapati, a six-year veteran of the company. "It's the decentralized server model that's used at Google. It's so familiar to me it's what I used."

The operation, an independent effort not organized by the Paul campaign, has drawn about 500 volunteers to the state in advance of Tuesday's primary, Boyapati estimates.
It works by squeezing as many volunteers as possible into about 12 homes that Boyapati has rented throughout the state, with extra people shuffled off to hotel rooms or to the homes of New Hampshire residents with a little extra room to spare. One host said in an interview Saturday that he had 15 out-of-state volunteers temporarily living in his basement.
"If you get a thousand people in a little state like New Hampshire, you can have a big impact," Boyapati says. "That impact is magnified because it's the first primary."
Googlers for Ron Paul
Boyapati isn't the only Googler who's braving New Hampshire's sub-zero winter to advance Paul's message of lowering taxes and government spending, opposing the Real ID Act, and withdrawing from Iraq immediately. Paul is the only Republican candidate for president who
One other former employee and five current Google engineers, who work on projects including an Asian version of Google Answers and the design of data center hardware, are staying with him in a four-bedroom group house close to Hackett Hill Road near Manchester. Boyapati says he doesn't know any Googlers who have come east to volunteer for other candidates. (After campaigning for Paul on Sunday, the crew returned home to watch V for Vendetta.)
After learning that Operation Live Free or Die volunteers were largely surviving on snack food, a local group called Ladies for Liberty volunteered to cook them meals twice a week. The rest of the time, there's a plentiful supply of potato chips, Indian takeout, and, in the refrigerator, Sam Adams beer.

In addition to having
Google employees, in fact, represent the single
Boyapati, who was born in Australia and became a U.S. citizen, says he was always
When Paul spoke at Google's Mountain View, Calif., headquarters in July, Boyapati
- More from News.com on this story's topics
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- Ron Paul "revolution" turns out to be a dud
-
by williamQ
January 9, 2008 10:47 AM PST
- First, the New Republic reports that Ron Paul is a racist
homophobe. Strong language- but that's *not* a flame. It's a
factual description of what The New Republic reported yesterday:
http://www.tnr.com/politics/story.html?id=e2f15397-a3c7-
4720-ac15-4532a7da84ca
Commentary here:
http://www.captainsquartersblog.com/mt/archives/016567.php
"It's been more than 14 hours since I posted about the TNR
story, and so far ... [no response]. I really expected to find
scores of outraged commentary in the Disqus moderation queue
when I woke up this morning, but so far, it's been as quiet as a
church mouse."
"The results from Iowa and New Hampshire may have finally
broken the spell. Paul's supporters had insisted that the
Revolution would launch from Iowa and New Hampshire, but
Paul only won marginal support. Even in Iowa, where he ran only
against Mitt Romney and Fred Thompson -- and where his
libertarianism should have won significant traction -- his
campaigning left him without a single delegate to the
convention."
"The Revolution turned out to be a dud. Even the writers at
Reason now wonder what kind of crypto policy Paul may have
been hiding, and Andrew Sullivan has (rather bravely) called out
Paul for his association with the vile rhetoric published for over
seventeen years under his own name."
"The green curtain has been pulled back, I think, and rational
minds have taken control. The comment sections will never be
the same."
-
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