After unveiling its hip smartphone-friendly logo, Google introduced an equally trendy "Fun Fact" tool, perfect for bored android users or those on their computer.

Typing "I'm feeling curious" or "fun fact" into the search engine brings up a random trivia at the top of search results.

Clicking the blue bar, which says "Ask Another Question," generates new random information, replacing the "fun fact" query with "I'm feeling curious" in the search box.

The tool is suited for random trivia games in offices and school. Fun Facts is a brilliant way to trigger curiosity, leading people to crave for more information on trivia topic, and search more. In the end, more people will use Google search. This innovation is a genius marketing tactic.

The most mind-boggling questions include, "What do you call a male and female Zebra?", "Can sharks swim backwards?", and "Is Franklin and Theodore Roosevelt related?"

Fun Facts is just one of the ways to waste time in Google. The social media giant's navigation apps are equally mentally stimulating.

Google Maps does not only guide travelers in their explorations, the feature also displays scarily accurate real-time clouds and real-time shadows when a user superzooms the place.

Google Mars functions like Google Maps, but it helps users navigate in Mars instead. Google Mars takes users to regions, spacecrafts, mountains, canyons, plains, ridges, and craters on the Red Planet.

Google Sky Maps paves the way for digital cosmic navigation. Viewers may now, browse through planets, constellations, stars, and galaxies. While Google Maps shows the accurate distance between places, Google Sky Maps shows the accurate placement of celestial bodies.