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...

The Google Camera app is coming to some Chromebooks

The camera app that Google puts on its Pixel phones is one of the best in the business, and now it looks like that same Google camera app is heading to Chrome OS too – it's appeared in the developer channel of the software for the Pixelbook and may well start showing up on other Chromebooks as well.

That would significantly improve the photo-taking capabilities of supported Chrome OS devices, and maybe even introduce extra features like a slow-motion video mode and the ability to launch the smart Google Lens mode from within the camera app.

Now you probably don't want to be taking too many photos with your laptop, but as Chrome OS starts showing up on more tablets and 2-in-1 devices, a decent camera app becomes more important. Most new Chromebooks include support for Android apps too, which is another reason to roll out the Google Camera app.

New app, better photos

A shortcut to the new camera app was spotted alongside the old camera app by some users running the dev channel of Chrome OS on their devices. For the time being, the new app only seems to launch properly on the Pixelbook, so there's still work to do.

Among the features available in the Google Camera app are support for HDR images, a portrait mode, and Motion Photos (where a little snippet of video is taken with each picture). Whether or not some or all of these features will make it over remains to be seen, but better photos should be the end result.

Based on some digging into the Chrome OS code, it looks as though the new camera will eventually show up for all Chromebooks that can run Android apps. At the time of writing though, Google hasn't said anything officially about the switch.

Via Android Police



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Steam Sale 2018: all the best games and deals

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