Apple Adds 2016 MacBook Pro Without Touch Bar to Refurbished Store
Apple recently updated its online store for refurbished products to add the 13-inch 2016 MacBook Pro without a Touch Bar, which was originally released in October of 2016.
There are a limited number of models available for purchase with various processor, storage, RAM configurations. Prices are discounted by up to $390, with Apple offering 12 to 16 percent off depending on a machine’s configuration.
Only higher-end models with upgraded processors, RAM, and storage are available at the current time, but earlier today, at least one lower-end machine was available for purchase. Apple’s refurbished stock fluctuates often, so if you’re hoping to get a specific configuration, it’s best to keep a close eye on the refurbished store.

13 and 15-inch 2016 MacBook Pro models with Touch Bar are not currently available from Apple’s refurbished site, but could be added soon based on the availability of the non-Touch Bar model.
All of Apple’s refurbished products go through a rigorous refurbishment process before being offered for sale, which includes inspection, repairs, cleaning, and repackaging. Refurbished Macs come with a one-year warranty that can be extended with an AppleCare purchase. For more tips on purchasing a refurbished product, make sure to check out our dedicated guide.
(Thanks, Nick!)
Related Roundups: MacBook Pro, Apple Deals
Buyer’s Guide: MacBook Pro (Neutral)
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Apple’s iTunes store puts females at forefront on International Women’s Day
Why it matters to you
Where would the entertainment industry be without women? The iTunes Store doesn’t even want to know, and is highlighting movies made by and featuring women in honor of International Women’s Day.
Tech companies around the world are celebrating International Women’s Day in their own unique ways, and for Apple, that celebration is manifesting itself on one of its most visible platforms — iTunes. On Wednesday, the tech giant made a few adjustments to its iTunes store to help draw attention to movies and television shows that feature women in a leading role. Content created or directed by women is also heavily featured.
If you visit the iTunes movie storefront, you’ll see films with strong female leads, including “Jackie,” “Loving,” and “Moana.” And the sections you may be accustomed to seeing on the iTunes front page have been replaced for the day with “Like a Girl” categories, which let you choose between films that show what it means to Fight “Like a Girl” and Write “Like a Girl.”
More: Flickr celebrates International Women’s Day from a female lens
iTunes is also specifically highlighting 10 actresses and filmmakers, inviting audiences to interact with “exciting new female actors and filmmakers whose work we love.” Included in this list are women like Amma Asante, Laia Costa, Tae Ri Kim, Meera Menon, and Ruth Negga.
In Apple’s TV section, viewers can now find a “Bold Women” section, which puts shows like Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, Insecure, Westworld, Steven Universe, and others front and center. And if that’s not enough, you can explore categories like Women of Comedy, Bold Dramas Created by Women, Bold Girls, and Women of Reality TV.
Of course, if you’d rather curl up with a good book instead of sit in front of a television screen, iTunes has you covered in that regard as well. In the iBooks store, you can delve deeper into the “More Hidden Figures” section, which shows off books about women in science, engineering, politics, and more, like “The Glass Universe” by Dava Sobel, and “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” by Rebecca Skloot.
So if you need something to do tonight, you can check out all the contributions women have made to the entertainment industry.
Are fidget toys legitimately good for your brain, or pseudoscientific snake oil?
Why it matters to you
From helping us focus to maybe even burning calories, it turns out that fidgeting — and toys like the Fidget Cube — are here to help.
“Fidget” isn’t exactly a word with the most positive of connotations. For many of us, it recalls veiled childhood threats of “stop fidgeting or,” and then the promised removal of something we value more highly than fidgeting. Type “stop” into Google’s search box and “stop fidget” is one of the first recommendations its autocomplete feature presents you with.
But fidgeting, like beloved 1990s TV properties, is making a comeback.
Last year, the creators of Fidget Cube — a Kickstarter desk toy allowing users to click, roll, flip, glide, spin and assorted fidgety verbs — set out to raise $15,000 to make their product a reality. They wound up raking in $6,465,690 from 154,926 backers.
More: Addicted to fidgeting? This versatile desk toy is everything you’ve dreamed of
Fidget Cube has inevitably been followed by a number of other crowdfunding campaigns designed to appeal to the twitchy fingers of those who supported it. One was a fidget pen called Think Ink, which combines a titanium pen exterior with a number of tactile elements for distracted fingers to play with. It made more than quadruple its funding target.
Is the idea that a distracting toy can actually help us just a pseudoscientific marketing ploy?
“I made this for my daughter,” co-founder Kent Lyon told Digital Trends. “She had just started a new job, which she nervous about, and started noticing that she was fidgeting a whole lot. Whether it was clicking her pen or playing with her hair, she found that she couldn’t stop doing something with her hands.” Lyon gave Think Ink the subtitle “Fidget to focus.”
But is this really a thing — or is the idea that a distracting toy can actually help us just a pseudoscientific marketing ploy?
“I think fidgeting is a great way to put away our distractions and concentrate on the one important thing that we are doing,” Kristoph Krisjans, creator of a new gravity-defying fidget toy called Moondrop, told Digital Trends. “I actually never saw anyone that couldn’t do their job because of fidgeting. Exactly the opposite: when I see someone fidgeting, most of the time they are deeply focusing on a process, so I tend to believe that fidgeting helps people to keep their attention.”

It’s tempting to bust out the klaxons at the breaking news that a fidget toy purveyor thinks fidget toys increase productivity. However, it just may be correct.
Research has shown that even small repetitive activities can increase the levels of neurotransmitters in the brain in a way that increases our ability to focus and pay attention. Even if the fidget you are carrying out involves minimal concentration — fidgeting with a pen, chewing gum, or doodling on a piece of paper — this type of multitasking can positively impact the outcome of a particular task.
“We feel personally that fidgeting has been beneficial in our daily lives, such as when in meetings or while brainstorming,” Matthew and Mark McLachlan, the siblings behind Fidget Cube told Digital Trends. “Since launching our product, we’ve had discussions with an incredible amount of mental health professionals and researchers in the fields of psychology and neuroscience who are interested in using Fidget Cube in their research. We’re excited to see the data that’s collected on this topic.”
This is especially noticeable when dealing with children with ADHD, as Purdue University professor Sydney Zentall has noted in her work.
“Our research has demonstrated that incorporating active tasks with flash cards or response boards, peer tutoring, or cooperative groups and by allowing students to play with ‘toys’ during delays — [such as] fuzzy pipe cleaners, clay, small collapsible rulers — can be used to improve attention and performance,” Zentall told Digital Trends. “These toys function to create novelty or change for a child who has difficulty maintaining sufficient activation and may be considered easily bored.”
According to Zentall, while failure to stay on task can reduce work speed and production, there is no evidence that most “distractions” increase errors among children with ADHD. Surprisingly, she said, these kind of fidget distractions “may actually help the child perform in the classroom, especially when tasks are long and tedious. That is, off-task looking may provide ‘doses’ of environmental stimulation that the child needs.”
More: A gravity-defying fidget toy that leverages a fascinating quirk of physics
There is even evidence that fidgeting can have a positive impact on people’s physical health. Examinations regarding the physical benefits of fidgeting are relatively few and far between, but a 2008 study tracked daily movements for a group of slim and overweight women, and discovered that the slimmer group tended to fidget more. “If the obese women adopted the activity patterns of the lean women,” the authors of the study noted, they might burn an extra 300 calories per day.
Sure, you’re never going to match a five-mile run by playing with your Fidget Cube, but the findings suggest that every little bit helps.
Ultimately, we’re still still a long way from the makers of fidget-focused desk toys being able to make explicit medical claims for their devices — but it seems that there is real scientific evidence to suggest that fidgeting has an important role to play in our lives.
Or at least, that’s what we’ll tell our boss next time she catches us playing with our latest Kickstarter purchase instead of writing and publishing stories. We’ll report back on whether or not it works.
Google provides a tool for making objects and places within video searchable
Why it matters to you
Google’s new tool for developers will enable applications to use cloud-based machine learning to detect and label objects and locations within video, speeding up searches.
During the Google Cloud Next Conference in San Francisco, Google revealed a new machine learning application program interface (API) called Cloud Video Intelligence. With this API, developers can create applications capable of detecting objects within video and making them searchable and discoverable. Both nouns and verbs can be applied to those objects, such as “dog” and “run.”
An API is essentially a bridge between a service and an application. In this case, the API connects to the Google Cloud Machine Learning platform for the compute aspect and stores annotated videos on Google Cloud Storage. Thus, due to this “bridge,” an application based on Google’s new API will have access to this specific functionality to provide end-users with a better way of searching through videos.
More: Google is developing a series of AI-powered features for Android O
“You can now search every moment of every video file in your catalog and find every occurrence as well as its significance,” Google states. “It helps you identify key nouns entities of your video, and when they occur within the video. Separate signal from noise, by retrieving relevant information at the video, shot or per frame.”
In a demo, users can search for animals in an MP4 video file lasting just over a minute and a half. The labels generated by Cloud Video Intelligence consist of Animal (99 percent), Wildlife (94 percent), Zoo (91 percent), Terrestrial Animal (54 percent), Nature (51 percent), Tourism (47 percent), and Tourist Destination (43 percent). The sample video focuses on the Los Angeles Zoo presented by Disney’s Zootopia CGI-animated movie.
However, what’s really neat about the new API is how it can detect a scene in a video. In the same clip, Cloud Video Intelligence can detect 48 scene changes and in real time detect and label objects as the scenes change. For instance, in one scene that displays just Nick the fox, the API will generate seven labels. In another scene focusing on the zoo’s sign, the system only generates two labels … again, all in real time.
What Google has done is create a tool that enables users to search through a video catalog just like they would with text documents. According to the company, this will be highly useful for businesses to separate signals that are buried under noise. It can also “detect features of a signal providing only relevant entities at video, shot or frame level.”
“Google has a long history working with the largest media companies in the world, and we help them find value from unstructured data like video,” said Fei-Fei Li, Chief Scientist of Google Cloud AI and Machine Learning. “This API is for large media organizations and consumer technology companies, who want to build their media catalogs or find easy ways to manage crowd-sourced content.”
The new API is now in a private beta and will also be offered to Google’s partners such as Cantemo, which will use the API to connect its video management software to the Google Cloud Machine Learning platform.
Google provides a tool for making objects and places within video searchable
Why it matters to you
Google’s new tool for developers will enable applications to use cloud-based machine learning to detect and label objects and locations within video, speeding up searches.
During the Google Cloud Next Conference in San Francisco, Google revealed a new machine learning application program interface (API) called Cloud Video Intelligence. With this API, developers can create applications capable of detecting objects within video and making them searchable and discoverable. Both nouns and verbs can be applied to those objects, such as “dog” and “run.”
An API is essentially a bridge between a service and an application. In this case, the API connects to the Google Cloud Machine Learning platform for the compute aspect and stores annotated videos on Google Cloud Storage. Thus, due to this “bridge,” an application based on Google’s new API will have access to this specific functionality to provide end-users with a better way of searching through videos.
More: Google is developing a series of AI-powered features for Android O
“You can now search every moment of every video file in your catalog and find every occurrence as well as its significance,” Google states. “It helps you identify key nouns entities of your video, and when they occur within the video. Separate signal from noise, by retrieving relevant information at the video, shot or per frame.”
In a demo, users can search for animals in an MP4 video file lasting just over a minute and a half. The labels generated by Cloud Video Intelligence consist of Animal (99 percent), Wildlife (94 percent), Zoo (91 percent), Terrestrial Animal (54 percent), Nature (51 percent), Tourism (47 percent), and Tourist Destination (43 percent). The sample video focuses on the Los Angeles Zoo presented by Disney’s Zootopia CGI-animated movie.
However, what’s really neat about the new API is how it can detect a scene in a video. In the same clip, Cloud Video Intelligence can detect 48 scene changes and in real time detect and label objects as the scenes change. For instance, in one scene that displays just Nick the fox, the API will generate seven labels. In another scene focusing on the zoo’s sign, the system only generates two labels … again, all in real time.
What Google has done is create a tool that enables users to search through a video catalog just like they would with text documents. According to the company, this will be highly useful for businesses to separate signals that are buried under noise. It can also “detect features of a signal providing only relevant entities at video, shot or frame level.”
“Google has a long history working with the largest media companies in the world, and we help them find value from unstructured data like video,” said Fei-Fei Li, Chief Scientist of Google Cloud AI and Machine Learning. “This API is for large media organizations and consumer technology companies, who want to build their media catalogs or find easy ways to manage crowd-sourced content.”
The new API is now in a private beta and will also be offered to Google’s partners such as Cantemo, which will use the API to connect its video management software to the Google Cloud Machine Learning platform.
Boost your signal and save more than $50 with our favorite Wi-Fi router deals
A good router can greatly enhance the Wi-Fi in your home or office, and can even save you money on rental fees if you are paying on a monthly basis for the equipment supplied by your internet service provider. Most people don’t worry too much about the technology in their routers, even when experiencing the frustration of slow speeds and spotty connections, but selecting the proper one for your needs is key togetting the most out of your online experience – especially for data-heavy tasks like streaming or online gaming.
We’ve collected eight of the best Wi-Fi router deals going right now. From cheap routers for small apartments to more expensive models designed for heavy jobs like 4K streaming, our roundup has a router to suit almost any need or budget, and includes some of our own favorites from makers like TP-Link.
Netgear WNR2020v2

If all you need is a basic wireless router for a small home or apartment, then the Netgear WNR2020v2 can do the job for cheap. N300 Wi-Fi delivers a throughput of up to 300 Mbps, and four Ethernet LAN ports are located on the back of the router for wired connections. Netgear Genie and Push-N-Connect make it a breeze to manage your network and connect new devices with the press of a button.
The Netgear WNR2020v2 is normally $30, but a 33 percent discount brings it down to just $20 on Amazon.
$20 on Amazon
Netgear C3700 (Certified Refurbished)

The Netgear C37 is another inexpensive, no-frills Wi-Fi router, but it does boast more power than the WNR2020v2. This model utilizes dual-band N600 Wi-Fi connectivity for a throughput of up to 600 Mbps, as well as 8×4 channel bonding for snappier download speeds. The C3700 also doubles as a high-speed DOCSIS 3.0 cable modem and features two wired Ethernet ports.
Amazon is selling the refurbished Netgear 3700 for just $50, offering you a nice $30 discount. Products that are certified refurbished by Amazon are in like-new condition and include all original accessories.
$50 on Amazon
Securifi Almond

If a smart router is more your speed, the highly rated Securifi Almond is a great alternative to traditional designs. This attractive Wi-Fi router integrates with your smart home ecosystem, and is compatible with Amazon Alexa for voice control. The touchscreen interface allows for easy setup in minutes without the need for a PC or a fussy web interface. Two internal antennas provide 300 Mbps of throughput and are MIMO-capable for faster simultaneous connections from multiple clients.
Normally $100, the Securifi Almond can be yours for just $62 from Amazon.
$62 on Amazon
TP-Link Archer C9

The TP-Link Archer C9 is widely regarded as a great all-around Wi-Fi router at a solid price, and can now be had for under $100. This AC1900 router boasts an impressive dual-band throughput of 1,900 Mbps for rapid download speeds, while the 1GHz dual-core processor provides a more seamless connection, with fewer interruptions when streaming or gaming.
Normally priced at $117 on Amazon, you can take 20 percent off of the TP-Link Archer C9 with the checkout code GDC20, which brings the cost down to just $94. This discount code is valid until March 10.
$94 on Amazon with code ‘GDC20’
Netgear Nighthawk X4

Heading into higher-end router territory brings us to the powerful and aggressive-looking Netgear Nighthawk X4. With 2,350 Mbps dual-band speeds, MU-MIMO technology for fast simultaneous connections, and 4×4 stream architecture, this Wi-Fi router is purpose-built for heavy-duty tasks and punches well above its weight in this price bracket.
Amazon is offering a $40 discount on the Netgear Nighthawk X4, but the checkout code GDC20 brings it down even further to just $144, for a combined 38 percent discount until March 10.
$144 on Amazon with code ‘GDC20’
TP-Link OnHub

The TP-Link OnHub is our favorite router, and for good reason: Super-simple setup, wide coverage, and fast AC1900 speeds make the OnHub a great all-around Wi-Fi router for your home network. Up to 100 simultaneous connections can be made to the OnHub, and 13 internal antennas eliminate dead zones. The router is also fully compatible with Google Wi-Fi nodes if you ever need to expand your network in the future.
Normally priced around $200, The TP-Link OnHub can be had for just $146 on Amazon after a nice $54 discount.
$146 on Amazon
Portal

Another one of our favorites due to its simplicity and ease of use is the Portal Wi-Fi router. This unique design works much like the OnHub, but it adds some extra power with a dual-band throughput of 2,400 Mbps. The Portal supports MU-MIMO, and it can also block out interfering signals from neighboring Wi-Fi networks for improved speeds and fewer interruptions thanks to its FastLanes system.
The Portal Wi-Fi router is available on Amazon for $149, $51 off of its normal price tag.
$149 on Amazon
TP-Link Archer C5400

The TP-Link Archer C5400, last on our list, is a beast of a Wi-Fi router. The C5400 easily handles online gaming, 4K video streaming, and multiple client connections with its whopping 5,400 Mbps of throughput. Three bands and MU-MIMO functionality make this powerful router a great choice for the most data-hungry users and those who need to manage larger networks.
A $54 discount is available with the checkout code GDC20, bringing this Wi-Fi powerhouse down to just $215. Although the TP-Link Archer C5400 is the most expensive router in our roundup, it’s also the best deal and provides a lot of value for the money as well: Similar AC5400 routers in this class often go for well over $300.
$215 on Amazon with code ‘GDC20’
Microsoft is spamming Windows 10 File Explorer with ads for OneDrive storage
Why it matters to you
Whether you like it or not, Microsoft might try to entice you to upgrade your OneDrive storage with new ads in Windows 10 File Explorer.
One of the least popular new “features” in Windows 10 is the advertising function Microsoft injected directly into the operating system. Ads show up in a number of ways, from promotions of Windows Store apps in the Start menu to pop-up “reminders” that Microsoft’s Edge browser gets better battery life than Google’s Chrome.
While Microsoft is addressing some other complaints about Windows 10 in the upcoming Creators Update — such as privacy concerns over the data that’s being transmitted and issues regarding how the operating system updates itself — the company seems intent on retaining Windows 10’s advertising functionality. In fact, it has apparently been adding a new OneDrive commercial to File Explorer, ExtremeTech reports.
More: Get ready for more ads in Windows 10 following the Anniversary Update
Basically, you might start seeing a new promotion for OneDrive when you’re perusing your file structure in Windows 10. OneDrive is baked into Windows 10 and can’t easily be uninstalled, and Microsoft wants to make sure you know that the 5GB of free OneDrive storage can be easily upgraded to significantly more space.

ExtremeTech
Turning off the OneDrive advertising isn’t without consequences. You can go to the View menu in File Explorer, then Options, and select “Change folder and search options.” In the next window, select the View menu, then scroll down to and uncheck the “Show sync provider notifications” option. Note that while this should disable the OneDrive ads, it will also stop you from seeing potentially important notifications from OneDrive.

If you’re persuaded by the ads and want to get some additional OneDrive storage space, then perhaps the most cost-effective option is to sign up for an Office 365 Personal subscription. That gives you up to 1TB of OneDrive space for one PC, along with the desktop version of Microsoft’s Office productivity suite, for $70 a year. If you splurge for Office 365 Home, then $100 will nab you the same deal for five PCs, each of which will enjoy the same 1TB of OneDrive storage.
These OneDrive ads apparently aren’t new, but they seem to be showing up more often for more people. If you see the ad, you can simply dismiss it by clicking “Not now.” It might show up again, however, and we’re not sure if the ads will end just because you upgrade your OneDrive storage.
Apple, LG rise in U.S. smartphone market share as Samsung falters, report says
Why it matters to you
Market share data like this suggests which companies might be more inclined to play it safe and which might feel the pressure to gamble and innovate with future devices.
The latest numbers from comScore’s MobiLens smartphone U.S. market share report are in for the three-month period ending in January and while the findings don’t suggest any sort of change in the industry status quo, they do illustrate a couple noteworthy insights.
Looking at the overall list, Apple maintains a healthy lead in the top spot, dominating control of the American mobile landscape with 44.6 percent of smartphone subscribers nationwide. Samsung takes a distant second with exactly 28 percent, followed by LG, Motorola, and HTC, in that order. Of the back three, LG is the only one to crack double digits with 10.3 percent market share. Motorola claims 4.3 percent, and HTC sits at 2.3.
More: Apple took a whopping 92 percent of smartphone industry profits for Q4 2016
In terms of the order of smartphone manufacturers, nothing has changed compared to comScore’s previous report released in October. Looking at the point changes, however, things get a little more interesting. Apple rose roughly two percent, while Samsung slid by the same amount. Meanwhile, LG bumped to 10.3 percent from its previous 9.6.

comScore
Although it’s difficult to quantify precisely what factors contributed to each company’s gains and losses, it wouldn’t be a reach to suggest Samsung’s Galaxy Note 7 troubles may have contributed, in some part, to the relative success of its two closest competitors. The phablet was first recalled for exploding battery concerns in early September, placing the beginning of the saga squarely in the middle of the August-to-October reporting period of comScore’s survey.
Meanwhile, Apple’s iPhone 7 and 7 Plus were met with a somewhat tepid response when they were released in mid-September, due to perceived similarities between those two devices and their preceding 6 and 6S counterparts. Samsung’s faults may have prevented it from capitalizing on a less-hyped-than-usual Apple launch and clawing back a narrow slice of the pie.
On the other hand, those struggles may have given LG some room to grow and simultaneously distance itself from the rest of the pack. It may also be a forbearer of continued good tidings for the company if its upcoming products are any indication. The G6 impressed us with its almost bezel-free design, gorgeous display, and excellent build quality at Mobile World Congress last week, earning it our Best in Show award.
Google Allo now works seamlessly with Android Auto

Now you can use one of Google’s least popular messaging apps to send messages while driving.

Go ahead — keep chuckling. Google’s Allo messaging service may not be the messaging savior we were all hoping to come to Android, but it’s currently serving its purpose in my life. I’m happy to see that it’s now compatible with Android Auto.
Previously, when you’d receive an Allo message while in the Android Auto app, the notification would disappear behind the main interface so as to remove any desire you might have to check it while driving. You couldn’t bring it up with a voice command, either, nor could you reply or compose an Allo message if you needed to while on the freeway. A recent Allo update, as pointed out by Phandroid’s Derek Ross, seemed to have finally added the hands-free functionality.
Sweet! Allo for Android Auto! pic.twitter.com/eUTGqLWfwy
— Derek Ross (@derekmross) March 8, 2017
The new Allo update also includes the ability to animate some emoji by sliding up on the send button, as well as various bug fixes.
How you can keep celebrating International Women’s Day now that it’s over
Android users, this is a great opportunity to take these resources and bookmark them for the next time you’re showing off your high-powered device.

International Women’s Day is almost over. The blog posts may have been written and the social media feeds filled to the brim, but that doesn’t mean the self-edification needs to stop there.
Earlier on, Google posted in solidarity about its efforts to support women through its Women Techmakers summits, including highlighting how its machine learning technology is being used to combat gender inequality in film. The blog was sprinkled with resourceful links and ideas for subtly sharing women’s accomplishments in the world, and I figured I’d round ’em up and share them with you so that you can get the dialogue started next time you’re showing off an Android device. These links might also be useful in a classroom setting.
First up, Google reminds us that YouTube is compromised of carefully curated playlists, including this YouTube Kids playlist called Super Women of Our Past, which introduces little tykes to women like Eleanor Roosevelt, Harriet Tubman, and Grace Hopper. Other playlists include Celebrate Women’s History Month and Celebrate International Women’s Day, though you could find more through a quick search.
YouTube is also hosting a #HerVoiceIsMyVoice campaign, which encourages other ladies to share a video of who inspires them. The video I’ve embedded above offers more information if you’re interested.
Google also announced its added 40 new Expeditions to its collection for classrooms, all of which are focused “on the careers, adventures, and contributions of women.” These include a look at female astronauts, airplane pilots, engineers, and more, though I’m looking forward to the day where this sort of thing doesn’t have to be highlighted. Until then, you can download the app yourself and pop your phone into a Cardboard headset to experience it.
Now, this wasn’t in the Google blog post. But while I have you, I’d ask that in honor of March being Women’s History Month, you to consider downloading the Historic Women Watch Faces for your Android Wear device. The app features a collection of illustrations highlighting women who have made a meaningful impact on technology, including Katherine Johnson (who is highlighted in the movie, Hidden Figures), Ada Lovelace, and the aforementioned Grace Hopper. Each watch face displays a quote from the woman tech maker when the watch is in ambient mode and it’s an easy way to flip into something that’s both stylish and subtly educational.
Google will be also celebrating the rest of Women’s History Month on Instagram.



