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Queen to visit Google London HQ

Head of state to grace web giant
Written by Nick Heath, Contributor

Head of state to grace web giant

When the Queen began her reign in 1952 computers were room-sized machines that cranked through rolls of punched tape.

Five decades later the recently wired-up monarch is to visit the UK headquarters of search giant Google.

Just four years ago the Queen admitted she didn't own a computer as she bestowed an honorary knighthood on Microsoft's ex-chairman Bill Gates but now she and her husband the Duke of Edinburgh are to grace Google's headquarters in London on 16 October.

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The Queen is fast on her way to becoming the world's most famous silver surfer, setting up The Royal Channel on Google-owned video sharing site YouTube in 2007 and reportedly keeping in touch with her grandchildren including Princes William and Harry by email.

Google said it had invited the Royal couple to tour the headquarters and meet staff after the success of the Royal Channel, which has more than 22,000 subscribers. In another nod to technology, the Queen's recent Christmas broadcasts were released as podcasts.

A Buckingham Palace spokesperson said: "The Queen supports all forms of new technology and pays interest to the latest developments."

The palace's website is thought to be set for a revamp, which will see it include more video and put more emphasis on user-friendliness.

A Google spokesperson added: "Our engineers in London are leading the world on a range of mobile products, and our advertising team is working with British industry to help them grow their businesses online.

"The Queen has a keen interest in technology and we're looking forward to showing our guests some of the exciting projects we're working on."

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