Suit up with Marvel Studios’ Avengers: Endgame and Pixel

Want to defeat a villain like Thanos and save the world?


Now #teampixel can, with a little help from Marvel Studios and Playground, a creative mode in the Pixel camera that gives you the power to create and play with the world around you using augmented reality. Just in time for the upcoming release of Marvel Studios’ “Avengers: Endgame,” in theaters April 26, today we’re adding to our collection of Playmoji from the Marvel Cinematic Universe with five new characters: War Machine, Thor, Black Widow, Rocket and Captain Marvel.


The heroes join Iron Man, Captain America, Hulk, Nebula and Okoye in Playground, so now you can make even more epic scenes come to life by adding the interactive characters to your photos and videos. Thanks to ARCore’s motion tracking, light estimation and ability to understand the real world, the Playmoji look and feel lifelike, and react to your facial expressions in real time.

You don’t need superhero strength or a suit of armor to unleash the power of Playground—you just need a Pixel and the newest Playmoji joining the Marvel Studios’ Avengers: Endgame pack.


For some added fun, we reimagined the Marvel Cinematic Universe by exploring what would happen if Pixel 3 was launched into a world in need of a little assistance, alongside the Avengers.

Pixel 3 + Marvel Studios‘ Avengers: Endgame

So whether you’re suiting up to defeat Thanos or getting ready to supercharge your selfie, start saving the world alongside your favorite Playmoji using Playground today. Show us how you’re assembling to defeat Thanos on social with #pixelendgame.

How we’re supporting economic opportunity in Iowa

For some, Iowa may call to mind images of rolling corn fields, or the Field of Dreams. But those in the know will tell you that the Hawkeye state has a storied history of technological innovation. The first electronic digital computer was created in a lab at Iowa State and Lee de Forest, the “Father of Radio,” was born and raised in Council Bluffs. Perhaps most impressively,  sliced bread is an Iowan invention, with the first single loaf bread-slicing machine patented here in 1928.

In 2009, Iowa also became home to a Google Data Center, where I—along with hundreds of Iowans—work to connect billions of people around the world to Google. When someone logs onto Gmail, watches a YouTube video or searches for an answer to some burning question, they might not think of Iowa, but they should.

With such a strong track record of fostering creative answers to difficult questions, Iowa is the perfect place for Google to kick off a statewide $1 million Google.org Impact Challenge, where we’re inviting local nonprofits to share their most ambitious ideas to create economic opportunity in their community. Then, a panel of local advisors will select the top five to receive a $175,000 grant to bring their ideas to life. Our advisors, listed below, represent all corners of the state:

  • Dr. Dan Kinney, President, Iowa Western Community College
  • Georgia Van Gundy, Executive Director and Board Secretary, Iowa Business Council
  • Monica Chavez-Silva, Assistant Vice President for Community Enhancement, Grinnell College
  • Sherry Ristau, President, Quad Cities Community Foundation
  • Tej Dhawan, Chief Data Officer, Principal Financial Group

To cap off the competition, Google will invite Iowans to select one of the five projects they believe will have the greatest impact.

We kicked the Challenge off this morning in Des Moines at the first stop of a three-city Grow with Google Iowa Tour, where we’re teaming up with local libraries and partner organizations across the state to offer free trainings so that Iowans have the opportunity to learn digital skills to grow their careers or businesses. Tomorrow and the following day, we’ll visit libraries in Council Bluffs and Davenport as part of a larger commitment to support economic opportunity in America and bring in-person digital skills workshops to libraries to all 50 states.

Iowa nonprofit organizations can find more information on the Google.org Impact Challenge and submit their applications by visiting g.co/iowachallenge. The deadline for submissions is May 17th at 11:59 p.m. CT. We’re expecting to name the five winners in the fall of 2019. Considering the sliced bread precedent, the bar is being set pretty high.

Advance your career with the Google Africa Certifications Scholarships

Building upon our pledge to provide mobile developer training to 100,000 Africans to develop world class apps, today we are pleased to announce the next round of Google Africa Certifications Scholarships aimed at helping developers become certified on Google’s Android, Web and Cloud technologies.


This year, we are offering 30,000 additional scholarship opportunities and 1,000 grants for the Google Associate Android, Mobile Web, and Associate Cloud Engineer certifications. The program will be delivered by our partners, Pluralsight and Andela, through an intensive learning curriculum designed to prepare motivated learners for entry-level and intermediate roles as software developers in these fields. Interested students can learn more about the Google Africa Certifications Scholarships and apply here.
Africa is on track to have the largest working-age population of 1.1 billion by 2034. Today’s announcement is about preparing the youth for the jobs of tomorrow by equipping them with the right developer skills. Google’s certifications are developed around a job-task analysis that test learners for skills employers expect developers to have in these domains.



Our continued initiatives focused on digital skills training, education and economic opportunity, and support for African startups and developers, demonstrate our commitment to helping advance a healthy and vibrant developer ecosystem. By providing support for training and certifications we will help bridge the unemployment gap on the continent through increasing the number of employable software developers.



We have already seen evidence that becoming certified can make a meaningful difference to developers and employers. Adaobi Frank - a graduate of the Associate Android Developer certification - got a better job that paid her 10X her previous salary after completing her certification. Her interview was quicker as her employer was convinced that she was great for the role after she mentioned that she was certified. Now, she's got a job that helps provide for her family. Through our efforts this year, we want to help many more developers like Adaobi and support the growth of startups and technology companies throughout Africa.


                                  Google Android Certification and Africa Scholarships | Ada's Story

Please click here to apply for the scholarship.

Posted by William Florance, Global Head, Developer Training Programs

Bringing greater transparency and context for news content on YouTube in India

https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/J8jWI8iVremDEGx8R4pKAnO4vsyEXUZ9vQawv_Mvi1HjFZCXXGQqmpxyZt6ralgSQ8JjQlHebsJp4qvWcE8Q82mJJ5MZ4QYS90p54pk16Dj8War5XboROv2p9YQWIy2A2kscdSRE
In the last few years, news has become an integral part of YouTube’s experience for millions of Indians online. With improved connectivity and low cost of data, watch-time of India’s authoritative news sources has more than tripled over the past two years. We have been hard at work to ensure that we are responsibly growing news and supporting news publishers on YouTube.


Towards this goal, we have taken a number of important steps and introduced three principles to guide the news experience on YouTube.


Make authoritative sources readily available
We know authoritativeness is essential to our viewers, so we’ve been investing in new product features to prominently surface authoritative sources across the platform. Our Top News shelf prominently highlights videos from authoritative news sources in search results.  And when a breaking news event happens, we want users to know about it. That’s why our Breaking News shelf highlights videos from authoritative news organizations about that event directly on the YouTube homepage. Both features are currently launched in more than 30 countries, including India in both English and Hindi.
Top News & Breaking News


Provide context to help people make their own decisions:
When users come to YouTube, we believe they should be able to make their own decisions about the information they consume.  We want to provide context alongside content on our platform to help users make more informed judgments, which we've done by introducing a wide range of information panels on certain events, topics, and publishers alongside search results and videos.


We recently expanded our information panels to bring fact checks from eligible publishers to YouTube in India in English and Hindi. This specific information panel aims to provide context on fresh topics that are prone to misinformation. The fact checks we surface rely on the open source Schema.org ClaimReview markup process. By following this process, any eligible publisher can contribute fact check articles that could show in search results on Google Search, Google News, and now, YouTube.
Fact Checking Integration on YouTube in English and Hindi


And today, we are taking another small step in our efforts by rolling out additional information panels in English and Hindi. If a channel is owned by a news publisher that is funded by a government, an information panel will surface that indicates that the publisher is “funded in whole or in part" or a “public broadcast service”, with a link to the publisher's Wikipedia page. Our goal is to equip users with additional information to help them better understand the sources of news content that they choose to watch on YouTube. This information panel will be displayed on the watch page of all the videos on its channel.


Support journalism with technology that helps news to thrive
Finally, we know quality journalism requires sustainable revenue streams, so we believe we can and must do more to support quality journalism and the news industry through innovation in technology.  At YouTube we have committed $25M to the news industry, as a part of a broader $300M investment by the Google News Initiative.


In December, we announced funding to 87 news projects from 23 countries around the world to build stronger video capabilities and innovate with new video formats.  And 10 of these projects came from India. We are also investing in expanded support from YouTube specialists to support news partners grow their presence on YouTube, from providing training to helping with sophisticated technical integrations.


We believe these positive steps will improve your experience of consuming news on YouTube and we look forward to continuing our close partnership with India’s news industry, as we continue our efforts in this space.

By Tim Katz, Director, Head of News Partnerships, YouTube

Bringing greater transparency and context for news content on YouTube in India

https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/J8jWI8iVremDEGx8R4pKAnO4vsyEXUZ9vQawv_Mvi1HjFZCXXGQqmpxyZt6ralgSQ8JjQlHebsJp4qvWcE8Q82mJJ5MZ4QYS90p54pk16Dj8War5XboROv2p9YQWIy2A2kscdSRE
In the last few years, news has become an integral part of YouTube’s experience for millions of Indians online. With improved connectivity and low cost of data, watch-time of India’s authoritative news sources has more than tripled over the past two years. We have been hard at work to ensure that we are responsibly growing news and supporting news publishers on YouTube.


Towards this goal, we have taken a number of important steps and introduced three principles to guide the news experience on YouTube.


Make authoritative sources readily available
We know authoritativeness is essential to our viewers, so we’ve been investing in new product features to prominently surface authoritative sources across the platform. Our Top News shelf prominently highlights videos from authoritative news sources in search results.  And when a breaking news event happens, we want users to know about it. That’s why our Breaking News shelf highlights videos from authoritative news organizations about that event directly on the YouTube homepage. Both features are currently launched in more than 30 countries, including India in both English and Hindi.
Top News & Breaking News


Provide context to help people make their own decisions:
When users come to YouTube, we believe they should be able to make their own decisions about the information they consume.  We want to provide context alongside content on our platform to help users make more informed judgments, which we've done by introducing a wide range of information panels on certain events, topics, and publishers alongside search results and videos.


We recently expanded our information panels to bring fact checks from eligible publishers to YouTube in India in English and Hindi. This specific information panel aims to provide context on fresh topics that are prone to misinformation. The fact checks we surface rely on the open source Schema.org ClaimReview markup process. By following this process, any eligible publisher can contribute fact check articles that could show in search results on Google Search, Google News, and now, YouTube.
Fact Checking Integration on YouTube in English and Hindi


And today, we are taking another small step in our efforts by rolling out additional information panels in English and Hindi. If a channel is owned by a news publisher that is funded by a government, an information panel will surface that indicates that the publisher is “funded in whole or in part" or a “public broadcast service”, with a link to the publisher's Wikipedia page. Our goal is to equip users with additional information to help them better understand the sources of news content that they choose to watch on YouTube. This information panel will be displayed on the watch page of all the videos on its channel.


Support journalism with technology that helps news to thrive
Finally, we know quality journalism requires sustainable revenue streams, so we believe we can and must do more to support quality journalism and the news industry through innovation in technology.  At YouTube we have committed $25M to the news industry, as a part of a broader $300M investment by the Google News Initiative.


In December, we announced funding to 87 news projects from 23 countries around the world to build stronger video capabilities and innovate with new video formats.  And 10 of these projects came from India. We are also investing in expanded support from YouTube specialists to support news partners grow their presence on YouTube, from providing training to helping with sophisticated technical integrations.


We believe these positive steps will improve your experience of consuming news on YouTube and we look forward to continuing our close partnership with India’s news industry, as we continue our efforts in this space.

By Tim Katz, Director, Head of News Partnerships, YouTube

Advance your career with the Google Africa Certifications Scholarships

Posted by William Florance, Global Head, Developer Training Programs

Building upon our pledge to provide mobile developer training to 100,000 Africans to develop world class apps, today we are pleased to announce the next round of Google Africa Certification Scholarships aimed at helping developers become certified on Google’s Android, Web, and Cloud technologies.

This year, we are offering 30,000 additional scholarship opportunities and 1,000 grants for the Google Associate Android Developer, Mobile Web Specialist, and Associate Cloud Engineer certifications. The scholarship program will be delivered by our partners, Pluralsight and Andela, through an intensive learning curriculum designed to prepare motivated learners for entry-level and intermediate roles as software developers. Interested students in Africa can learn more about the Google Africa Certifications Scholarships and apply here

According to World Bank, Africa is on track to have the largest working-age population (1.1 billion) by 2034. Today’s announcement marks a transition from inspiring new developers to preparing them for the jobs of tomorrow. Google’s developer certifications are performance-based. They are developed around a job-task analysis which test learners for skills that employers expect developers to have.

As announced during Sundar Pichai - Google CEO’s visit to Nigeria in 2017, our continued initiatives focused on digital skills training, education and economic opportunity, and support for African developers and startups, demonstrate our commitment to help advance a healthy and vibrant ecosystem. By providing support for training and certifications we will help bridge the unemployment gap on the continent through increasing the number of employable software developers.

Although Google’s developer certifications are relatively new, we have already seen evidence that becoming certified can make a meaningful difference to developers and employers. Adaobi Frank - a graduate of the Associate Android Developer certification - got a better job that paid ten times more than her previous salary after completing her certification. Her interview was expedited as her employer was convinced that she was great for the role after she mentioned that she was certified. Now, she's got a job that helps provide for her family - see her video here. Through our efforts this year, we want to help many more developers like Ada and support the growth of startups and technology companies throughout Africa.

Follow this link to learn more about the scholarships and apply.

See Brighter in the Dark with Pixel at Coachella

This weekend, Coachella festival-goers will wander the desert, heading to and from performances by some of their favorite artists. If you're one of them, head over to Brighter in the Dark—a tech and music installation we created with Childish Gambino.


The installation—a multisensory sight and sound experience that uses a mixture of light and music to give attendees a sneak peek into Childish Gambino’s creative world—uses the power of Pixel’s camera features to provide an interactive and Instagrammable moment for festival-goers.

Fans can also swing by Brighter in the Dark to get a sneak peek of Childish Gambino’s  augmented reality (AR) app that we’re previewing onsite at Coachella on Pixel 3. Not heading to Indio? Stay tuned for more info, as the AR app is coming to more devices soon!

Whether you’re bringing your Pixel with you to weekend one or weekend two, here are a few ways your camera can help you capture the beauty of the desert and the sights of Coachella.

Night Sight: Use Pixel’s low-light mode, Night Sight, to capture the best evening photos at Coachella, and experience the cool visuals at Brighter in the Dark.

Motion Auto Focus: Don’t let your dancing prevent you from taking amazing  photos! Your Pixel can be your mosh-pit companion—with Motion Auto Focus, videos and photos that you take of your favorite headliners will stay in focus, even while the performers are moving around the stage.

Group Selfie: Traveling in a pack to Coachella? Get your whole crew in the picture with Pixel 3’s wide angle selfie cam in Group Selfie mode.

Google Lens: Inspired by a fellow fan’s festival fashion? Use Lens with a long-press on the Camera’s viewfinder to search for similar items.

Don’t forget to share your Brighter in the Dark experience with #teampixel!

Launching a YouTube dataset of user-generated content

We are excited to launch a large-scale dataset of public user-generated content (UGC) videos uploaded to YouTube under a Creative Commons license. This dataset is intended to aid the advancement of research on video compression and quality evaluation.

We created this dataset to help baseline research efforts, as well as foster algorithmic development. We hope that this dataset will help the industry better comprehend UGC quality and tackle UGC challenges at scale.

What is UGC?


User-generated content (UGC) videos are uploaded by users and creators. These videos are not always professionally curated and could exhibit perceptual artifacts. For the purpose of this dataset, we've selected original videos with specific and perceptual quality issues, like blockiness, blur, banding, noise, jerkiness, and so on.



These videos have a wide array of categories, such as “how to” videos, technology reviews, gaming, pets, etc.

Since these videos are often captured in environments without controlled lighting, with ambient noise, or on low-end capture devices, they may end up exhibiting various video quality issues, such as camera shaking, low visibility, or jarring audio.

Before sharing these videos, creators may edit the video for aesthetics and generally compress the captured video for a faster upload (e.g. depending on the network conditions). Creators also may annotate the video or add additional overlays. The editing, annotating, and overlaying processes change the underlying video data at the pixel and/or frame levels. Additionally, any associated compression may introduce visible compression artifacts within the video such as blockiness, banding, or ringing.

For these reasons, in our experience, UGC should be evaluated and treated differently from traditional, professional video.

The challenges with UGC


Processing and encoding UGC video presents a variety of challenges that are less prevalent in traditional video.

For instance, look at these clips shown below that are heavily ridden with blockiness and noise. Many modern video codecs would target their encoding algorithms based on reference-based metrics, such as PSNR or SSIM. These metrics measure the fidelity of accurately reproducing the original content roughly pixel for pixel, including artifacts. The assumption here is that the video that acts as the reference is “pristine,” but for UGC, this assumption often breaks down.




In this case, the videos on the left ends up having 5 Mbps bitrate to faithfully represent the originally uploaded user video content. However, the heavily compressed video on the right has a bitrate of only 1 Mbps, but looks similar when compared to the 5 Mbps counterpart.

Another unconventional challenge can come from a lack of understanding of the provided quality of the uploaded video. With traditional video, quite often a lower quality is a result of heavy editing or processing and an un-optimized encoding. However, this is not always true for UGC, where the uploaded video itself could be sufficiently low quality that any number of optimizations on the encoding operation would not increase the quality of the encoded video.

How is the dataset put together?


This dataset is sampled from millions of YouTube uploaded videos licensed under a Creative Commons license. Only publicly shared videos from uploaders are sampled.

The sample space the videos were chosen from can be divided into four discrete dimensions: Spatial, Motion, Color, and Chunk-level variations. We believe that this dataset reasonably represents the variety of content that we observe as uploads within these dimensions.

For technical details on how this dataset was composed, the coverage correlations scores and more, please refer to our paper on dataset generation in arxiv (also submitted to ICIP 2019).

Where can I see and download it?


This UGC dataset can be explored over various content categories and resolutions in the explore tab of media.withyoutube.com. The video preview will be shown when you mouse-over the video, along with an overlay of the attribution.

Various content categories are separated out for simplicity of selection. HDR and VR formats are available in addition for each resolution. Though some high frame rate content is present as part of the offering, it is not currently separated out as a category. Frame rate information is embedded in the video metadata and can be obtained when the corresponding video is downloaded.

Videos can be downloaded from the download tab of media.withyoutube.com page. Here you will also notice the CC BY creative commons attribution file for the whole set of videos. Details about the video download format along with the link to the Google Cloud Platform location are available on this page.

Additionally, three no-reference metrics that have been computed on the UGC video dataset by the YouTube Media Algorithms team are available to download from this page. These three metrics are Noise, Banding, and SLEEQ. Explanations of each were published in ICIPs and ACM Multimedia Conferences.

Posted by Balu Adsumilli, Sasi Inguva, Yilin Wang, Jani Huoponen, Ross Wolf.https://00e9e64bace9f5e25eea751bfc166a8b1fbaa1ba7953e385ec-apidata.googleusercontent.com/download/storage/v1/b/ugc-dataset/o/ugc_dataset.pdf?qk=AD5uMEubH8dw1x99vqYiYYT-xf8d2C6SaB68mY_STRb02_DIfFsYUNL5oaYz5nLDe-wSUHpvz91A0qWfScMWs19Vru89BLon5YrNy0ed0x50Weo-jrTNPzOP14BpJgA7bu-H0t4zTidJITRw8u9FP0AKPuDhDsXJXI5NpffFF_ilsR93DbbVK_6t-iIF772CYxGFE9aYvgSrLHJDy6Q81H4uMhJKgE5jcEwLGhpEdYy1Hsa31rBMxy03cAmEBkqjKXHxAn5Ap0qAGpfAKeJ6aEQaKat14OlfOiAhCH9Bw2bN5BD5LE3b1X-tcTyrmb6zdGzIOJo2qDltBsD9ug3Hy-H7BRDYCOSszG_m88xqiiQ0Rx6ElsnkK5jG17atPf7o3Iefb7CLD2DsPZfKKXdDbOdR-q5THFYl9M15Jg2lfBaYjztT7Kv4aX2rTzl0-C1t5pAcEiIlCO0eMmCv7Vx7BV-s-YsEMk_vwfgd3X58lbezgoIgg651cEN4EGqx2_X2vZP0JJjV5sRDvr3_KZnnpRyhM8xUL_-f2OMKEHGYe0Gw4FqcdU4n1Lu70ezWvQ3E4yx3FGXjIs8w6jxBhP3H5Of4EsbWUScXoNflzTI65R1JR1KGojSvf_oZ0jgXya2KzwW4sBD2bb9w_BTqH3K_CpdGXQ7a-XCc8Jns7dQVQDyB4uxzDSb4HGfry1y3LzFMpCDBwsjKwLbea3BL7Keq6DdIntEsQOJZE0VUgrQ7DdGUklj3rF-D2mtVP7IZ5n9oUvAYVL4wqbRVuOS4lP6w-MHEeGYVoOYgnA

More science in more places with Science Journal and Google Drive

We first launched Science Journal in 2016 so that students, teachers and science enthusiasts could conduct hands-on science experiments using their phones, tablets and Chromebooks. Since then, we've heard one request from teachers loud and clear: students need to be able to access their experiments no matter what device they're using or where they are. Learning doesn't just happen in the classroom, it happens outdoors, at home and everywhere in between. So today, we’re bringing a new Google Drive syncing feature to Science Journal. Now, you can access your experiments on any device using a Google Account.

Drive Sync with Science Journal

Accessing your experiment from Google Drive is easy: you can sign in with any Google Account and all of your experiments will be backed up to a Science Journal folder in Google Drive. If you have existing experiments on your device, you can add them to your Google Drive account. Many viewing, sharing and collaboration features will be coming to Science Journal in the future.


If you don't have a Google Account or you don't want to sign in, you can still use Science Journal—but your data won't be saved to Google Drive. If your school doesn't have Google Accounts, you can sign up for G Suite for free—just remember that G Suite for Education accounts need a domain administrator to activate Science Journal in the G Suite Admin console.


In addition to today’s syncing feature, we have a lot of new resources in Science Journal, just for teachers. Check out the new fundamentals and advanced professional development modules in the Google for Education Teacher Center. For introductory science activities, head over to Scholastic's Science in Action initiative, and for more hands-on physics content, you can pre-order Arduino's Science Kit. If you're looking for new ways to enhance Science Journal's capabilities, check out Vernier's Go Direct line of classroom sensors. Science Journal activities can now be found on the Workbench site, and you can always find activities and more on the Science Journal website and get support in our new help center. Finally, the Science Journal iOS app is now open source, so the app's code is available to the public, making it a great opportunity for students, hobbyists and companies who want to see how Science Journal works and even contribute code back to us.


Our goal with Science Journal is to help you enhance scientific thinking and data literacy in your classroom. Stay tuned for more updates in the coming months, and let us know what you think on our forum. You can tweet at us @GScienceJournal, or just use the #myScienceJournal hashtag on Twitter.

Source: Drive


More science in more places with Science Journal and Google Drive

We first launched Science Journal in 2016 so that students, teachers and science enthusiasts could conduct hands-on science experiments using their phones, tablets and Chromebooks. Since then, we've heard one request from teachers loud and clear: students need to be able to access their experiments no matter what device they're using or where they are. Learning doesn't just happen in the classroom, it happens outdoors, at home and everywhere in between. So today, we’re bringing a new Google Drive syncing feature to Science Journal. Now, you can access your experiments on any device using a Google Account.

Drive Sync with Science Journal

Accessing your experiment from Google Drive is easy: you can sign in with any Google Account and all of your experiments will be backed up to a Science Journal folder in Google Drive. If you have existing experiments on your device, you can add them to your Google Drive account. Many viewing, sharing and collaboration features will be coming to Science Journal in the future.


If you don't have a Google Account or you don't want to sign in, you can still use Science Journal—but your data won't be saved to Google Drive. If your school doesn't have Google Accounts, you can sign up for G Suite for free—just remember that G Suite for Education accounts need a domain administrator to activate Science Journal in the G Suite Admin console.


In addition to today’s syncing feature, we have a lot of new resources in Science Journal, just for teachers. Check out the new fundamentals and advanced professional development modules in the Google for Education Teacher Center. For introductory science activities, head over to Scholastic's Science in Action initiative, and for more hands-on physics content, you can pre-order Arduino's Science Kit. If you're looking for new ways to enhance Science Journal's capabilities, check out Vernier's Go Direct line of classroom sensors. Science Journal activities can now be found on the Workbench site, and you can always find activities and more on the Science Journal website and get support in our new help center. Finally, the Science Journal iOS app is now open source, so the app's code is available to the public, making it a great opportunity for students, hobbyists and companies who want to see how Science Journal works and even contribute code back to us.


Our goal with Science Journal is to help you enhance scientific thinking and data literacy in your classroom. Stay tuned for more updates in the coming months, and let us know what you think on our forum. You can tweet at us @GScienceJournal, or just use the #myScienceJournal hashtag on Twitter.

Source: Drive