Thursday
Jun152017

'Toca Lab: Plants' mixes science and fun

Develop the inquisitive, scientific mind in your child with this new Toca Lab: Plants. It's taken inspiration from Toca Boca’s Toca Lab: Elements but brings the setting into a botanical laboratory. There kids will discover different types of plants and even create their own hybrid ones. The game features scientifically-inspired pieces of lab equipment, five different stations, and 35 all-new plant characters to be discovered. They can visit things like the watering tank, nutrition station, cloning machine, and more. The app features a kid-friendly interface without any rules, levels or high scores. It doesn’t have any ads either and will be available starting today for $2.99 on Apple App Store, Google Play, and Amazon.

Wednesday
Jun142017

New Xbox Live Avatars system coming this fall with focus on diversity

Xbox Live Avatars have been gamer's virtual identity since 2008 when launched on Xbox 360. Now designed on Unity, the Xbox Live Avatar system is getting a whopper of an update this fall with focus on diversity and representation with a wide range of options, animations and accessories. Microsoft says it will ship its “Avatar 2.0” system to Windows 10 users first and then to the the Xbox.

Source: The Verge

Wednesday
Jun142017

Uniqlo unveils LifeWear Fall/Winter 2017 collection

By Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla

Uniqlo showed off its LifeWear Fall/Winter 2017 Collection in downtown Toronto today. On display were a variety of casual yet stylish outerwear, accessories and innovative new collections from Ines de La Fressage which focuses on menswear with a smart Parisian character, a first for Uniqlo.

The focus of the collection was very much on texture and a range of fabrics ideal for the cooler months. New this year was U-Kints, which brings a seamless knitted sweaters and dresses in varying designs and cuts. 

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Wednesday
Jun142017

Google crowns national winner and three grade group winners of Doodle 4 Google Canada

Google Canada revealed the national winner and three grade group winners of this year’s  Doodle 4 Google contest. More than 12,000 students from across the country submitted doodles around the theme “What I see for Canada’s future is…”. Young artists imagined a country where robots could cure disease, others dreamed of living on Mars, while some saw a world united by nature.

Following a very close public vote, where Canadians voted more than 465,000 times, we revealed our four incredibly talented grade group winners at the Art Gallery of Ontario. Of those four masterpieces, 11th-grader Jana Sofia Panem’s Doodle, "A Bright Future" was selected as the national winner!

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