Steam Sale 2018: all the best games and deals

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Those fine folks at Steam love a sale, and fortunately for us, they come around pretty regularly too, giving you a chance to pick up everything from indie darlings to AAA tentpoles at cheaper prices. Most recently we saw the Steam Summer Sale come and go, but it shouldn't be too long before another one arrives, if you missed out on that occasion. Besides the season sales, there's a continuing selection of weekly sales to pick from too. In this guide we'll keep you up right to date with the best deals and discounts currently available on the platform, and how to get the best out of the sales. These are the best mice you can buy for your PC How to get the best deals in the Steam Sales Whichever way you approach a particular Steam Sale, you're guaranteed to have the chance to pick up some top gaming titles at great prices.  Finding bargains isn't too difficult, but there are a few techniques and tricks that are worth using if you want to get the most out of t...

Google Maps on desktop now shows the Earth as a 3D globe

While Google has been busy adding updates to its Maps app, the search giant took its time announcing the most important one yet. 

When you open Google Maps on your desktop computer and zoom all the way out, the world now appears as a 3D globe rather than the usual flat two-dimensional map.

Adding another dimension to Maps takes care of the issue of displaying incorrect proportions in a flat view of the Earth, especially as you move further away from the equator.

No more flat Earth

The original flat depiction (or mercator projection) of the Earth distorted the size of areas in higher latitudes significantly, making regions closer to the poles look larger than they actually are in relation to land masses closer to the equator.

For instance, Greenland appears to be larger than Africa in the Mercator projection, whereas in reality it only measures 836,300 square miles compared with Africa's 11.73 million square miles.

In fact, Antartica appears to be largest continent when viewed on a mercator projection when, in fact, it ranks just fifth in area.

Google says that its three-dimensional Globe Mode fixes that problem.

However, Globe Mode is available only on desktop at the moment, although it works on any browser, thanks to the WebGL API, which renders “interactive 2D and 3D graphics within any compatible web browser without the use of plugins”.

While the change brings Maps in line with Google Earth, which always depicted the Earth in three dimensions, Flat Earthers have been quick to find fault with the update.

In an email seen by CNET, Pete Svarrior, a social media manager at the Flat Earth Society said, “From a Flat Earth point of view, this is a change from one inaccurate projection (Mercator) to another (a globe). Google Maps is a product ... [that] tries to deliver what [its] customers want to receive. Most people firmly believe that the Earth is a globe -- it's sensible business to display it as one.”



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