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Google is bringing its new Material Design to its Chrome browser for Android. The company says that the revamped app will hit the Google Play Store over the coming few days. Beyond the new design elements, Chrome 37 will also automatically log users into Google sites if they sign into the browser app using their Google account. There are also the mandatory “bug fixes and performance improvements” that you’d expect with any app update. You can grab the app at the link below, but you will need to wait until the new version goes live. ➤ Chrome 37 for Android Also read: 9 principles…
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There’s good news if you’re into cult game Minecraft and bought/are on the cusp of buying a next-gen games console. That’s because the title is heading to both the Xbox One and PS4 this week. The game will be available for the PS4 on Thursday, with Sony charging €18.99 (around $25.00) for first-time players or €3.99 (around $5.20) for those upgrading from the PS3 edition. Microsoft is making the title available for the Xbox One on Friday — using a similar pricing system of $19.99 for new users or $4.99 for upgrades from the Xbox 360 version. ➤ Xbox announcement ➤ PS4 announcement Related: Geronimo! Doctor Who is coming…
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Given how dark the world looks right now, sometimes it’s hard to fathom the suffering of times past. By any standard, the era of the Great Depression, roughly spanning the decade before World War II, qualifies as a time of extreme hardship worldwide. For the technology of the time, the Depression in the US was quite well documented, particularly by some outstanding photographers who were employed by the US government’s Farm Security Administration and Office of War Information — the largest photography project ever undertaken by the US government. And now those photographs are easier than ever to search and find with Photogrammar, Yale University’s…
This story continues at The Next Web
The post Yale University serves up an interactive treasure trove of photos from the Great Depression appeared first on The Next Web.

Given how dark the world looks right now, sometimes it’s hard to fathom the suffering of times past. By any standard, the era of the Great Depression, roughly spanning the decade before World War II, qualifies as a time of extreme hardship worldwide. For the technology of the time, the Depression in the US was quite well documented, particularly by some outstanding photographers who were employed by the US government’s Farm Security Administration and Office of War Information — the largest photography project ever undertaken by the US government. And now those photographs are easier than ever to search and find with Photogrammar, Yale University’s…
This story continues at The Next Web
The post Yale University serves up an interactive treasure trove of photos from the Great Depression appeared first on The Next Web.




