Hi,
friends!
Welcome
to
Installer
No.
52,
your
guide
to
the
best
and
Verge-iest
stuff
in
the
world.
(If
you’re
new
here,
welcome,
I
swear
I
don’t
always
just
share
absurdly
expensive
gadgets,
and
also
you
can
read
all
the
old
editions
at
the
Installer
homepage.)
I
also
have
for
you
some
expensive
but
excellent
new
gadgets,
a
couple
of
great
new
tech
podcasts,
the
best
pause
music
ever,
a
new
game
that
will
take
over
your
weekend,
and
much
more.
Let’s
dig
in.
(As
always,
the
best
part
of
Installer
is
your
ideas
and
tips.
What
are
you
into
right
now?
What
should
everyone
else
be
watching,
reading,
playing,
building,
buying,
or
singing
in
the
car?
Tell
me
everything:
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And
if
you
know
someone
else
who
might
enjoy
Installer,
tell
them
to
subscribe
here.)
/
A
weekly
newsletter
by
David
Pierce
designed
to
tell
you
everything
you
need
to
download,
watch,
read,
listen
to,
and
explore
that
fits
in
The
Verge’s
universe.
The
Drop
The
PS5
Pro.
I
can’t
imagine
spending
$700
on
any
game
console,
let
alone
one
with
no
disc
drive.
That
said,
I
do
love
the
idea
of
flying
around
in
Spider-Man
2
— the
only
game
I
love
to
just
aimlessly
explore
for
hours
at
a
time
– with
perfect
graphics
at
blistering
frame
rates. Technically
this
isn’t
up
for
preorder
for
a
couple
of
weeks,
but
I’m
sharing
it
now
because
we’re
all
going
to
need
to
start
saving
money
ASAP.
The
AirPods
4
with
ANC.
I’m
sure
the
iPhone
16
is
fine,
but
to
my
mind,
this
is
the
most
exciting
thing
Apple
launched
this
week
—
a
set
of
open-ear
headphones
with
decent
noise
cancellation
is
a
rare
and
exciting
thing.
(The
AirPods
Pro
hearing
aid
stuff
is
also
extremely
cool.)
The
Huawei
Mate
XT.
This
is
the
phone
of
the
week.
I
can’t
stop
watching
the
video
of
the
trifold,
which
gives
intense
Westworld
tablet
vibes,
in
the
best
possible
way.
You
probably
can’t
buy
it,
and
at
$2,800,
you
probably
wouldn’t
want
to
anyway,
but
I
love
that
this
thing
exists.
Will
&
Harper.
I
keep
hearing
great
things
about
this
doc,
in
which
Will
Ferrell
and
Harper
Steele
drive
across
the
country
and
try
to
make
sense
of
their
relationship
after
Steele
came
out
as
trans.
There’s
a
great
New
York
Times
interview
with
them
about
the
process,
too.
Channels
with
Peter
Kafka.
Nobody
does
insidery
tech
media
pods
like
Kafka,
so
I
was
psyched
to
see
him
back
on
the
digital
airwaves
once
again.
(I
guess,
disclosure,
he’s
making
the
show
with
Vox
Media,
The
Verge’s
parent
company.)
The
first
episode,
with
New
Yorker
editor
David
Remnick,
was
a
good
one.
Panic
World.
Another
great
new
podcast!
Ryan
Broderick
writes
one
of
my
absolute
favorite
newsletters
about
the
internet,
Garbage
Day,
and
the
first
episode
of
the
podcast
has
the
same
“smart
but
borderline
unhinged”
vibe
to
it.
It’s
delightful.
Warhammer
40,000:
Space
Marine
2.
I’m
a
pretty
simple
gamer.
I
like
games
where
I
get
to
battle
with
and
/
or
against
cool
robots,
and
I
love
when
everything
is
needlessly
intense
and
gory.
All
of
which
is
to
say,
I’m
confident
I
will
find
the
latest
Warhammer
installment
utterly
ridiculous
and
delightful
—
just
as
everyone
else
seems
to.
“
Goldeneye
Watch
Music.”
This
song
is
100
percent
guaranteed
to
be
on
my
Spotify
Wrapped
this
year,
just
based
on
this
week
alone.
The
epic
pause
music
from
an
all-time
great
game
is
now
six
minutes
long,
super
high-def,
and
constantly
on
repeat
while
I
work.
iFixit’s
FixHub
Smart
Soldering
Iron.
I
trust
The
Verge’s
Sean
Hollister
completely
when
it
comes
to
techie
DIY,
and
he
loves
iFixit’s
super-portable,
super-simple
tool
for
all
things
liquid
metal.
It’s
not
cheap,
but
it
sounds
like
a
heck
of
a
lot
of
fun.
Chrome
Tab
Groups
on
iOS.
A
tiny
but
really
welcome
browser
upgrade:
you
can
now
sync
tab
groups
from
your
computer
to
your
iPhone.
(It
already
worked
on
Android.)
Tab
management
on
mobile
is
generally
trash,
and
tab
groups
are
a
really
good,
not-quite-bookmarks
way
to
keep
things
in
order.
Screen
share
When
I
mentioned
a
couple
of
months
ago
how
much
I
liked
Andrew
Bosworth’s
idea
of
“Inbox
Ten,”
which
focuses
on
ending
every
day
not
finished
with
everything
but
in
a
manageable
place,
I
heard
from
a
bunch
of
you
who
liked
the
approach,
too.
Bosworth’s
system
is
simple
and
straightforward
but
also
a
good
way
to
keep
a
lot
of
things
in
order.
When
he’s
not
a
productivity
blogger,
Bosworth
(everybody
calls
him
Boz)
is
the
CTO
of
Meta.
He’s
been
there
a
hair
shy
of
two
decades
and
right
now
seems
to
spend
a
lot
of
his
time
thinking
about
AI,
AR,
headsets,
the
metaverse,
and
apparently
all
of
the
other
60
million
things
Meta
is
up
to
these
days.
I
asked
Boz
to
share
his
homescreen
to
see
how
he
manages
it
all
and
what
else
he
might
be
thinking
about.
Here’s
Boz’s
homescreen —
he’s
a
company
man!
—
plus
some
info
on
the
apps
he
uses
and
why:
The
phone:
I
actually
have
two
phones,
an
Android
and
an
iPhone;
my
work
phone
is
an
Android,
and
that’s
where
I
have
beta
versions
of
our
apps
to
dogfood.
I’ve
always
been
into
smaller
phone
form
factors,
so
I’m
currently
using
a
Motorola
Razr
Plus
for
work,
but
I
did
have
to
go
in
for
the
iPhone
15
Pro
because
I
love
the
wide-angle
camera.
The
wallpaper:
My
lockscreen
is
a
composite
of
photos
I
took
of
the
solar
eclipse
in
2017.
My
homescreen
wallpaper
is
a
valley
oak
that
is
special
to
my
wife
and
me,
at
the
property
in
Carmel
Valley
where
we
got
married.
The
apps:
Savant,
Alarm.com,
Authy,
1Password,
Siedle,
Unity
Video,
Find
My,
Clock,
Tidal,
Asana,
Noom,
Settings,
Mercedes
Me
Connect,
Bill,
Meta
Horizon,
Meta
View,
Messages,
Phone,
Camera,
Facebook,
WhatsApp,
Messenger,
Threads,
Instagram,
Gmail,
Google
Calendar,
Google
Maps,
Safari.
Definitely
a
one-screen
guy
so
I
try
to
keep
all
my
most
used
apps
on
one
screen
with
no
folders.
If
they
aren’t
there,
I
just
search
for
them.
My
homescreen
is
more
or
less
apps
by
frequency
of
use,
with
the
apps
at
the
bottom
left
used
most
often
and
toward
the
top
right
used
less
often.
Communication
roughly
in
the
lower-left
segment,
home
things
upper
left,
media
lower
right,
and
miscellaneous
upper
right.
I
also
asked
Boz
to
share
a
few
things
he’s
into
right
now.
Here’s
what
he
sent
back:
I’m
a
huge
photography
buff
and
I’ve
really
gotten
into
developing
my
own
film
lately
using
a
Lab-Box.
I’ve
been
shooting
a
lot
with
film
cameras,
including
a
medium
format
Mamiya
C330
Professional
and
Hasselblad
500C/M
—
then
I
scan
to
digital
from
there.
I
also
collect
and
shoot
with
rare
or
unusual
lenses
and
am
in
the
early
stages
of
building
my
own
lens,
but
still
very
much
in
the
design
phase,
and
this
will
likely
take
me
a
while
to
execute.
I
have
young
kids,
so
a
lot
of
my
time
revolves
around
transporting
them
to
various
activities
and
locations,
but
I
really
enjoy
the
time
I
spend
with
them
and
the
people
who
support
them
in
all
their
myriad
pursuits.
I’ve
got
glasses
on
the
mind
—
I’ve
been
talking
about
the
challenges
we’ve
overcome
building
our
first
working
AR
glasses
prototype,
and
I’m
very
excited
about
them,
as
is
Mark
[Zuckerberg].
We’ve
seen
the
success
and
appeal
of
displayless
smart
glasses
with
AI
built
into
them
with
the
Ray-Ban
Meta
Smart
Glasses,
and
the
prototype
we’ve
built
is
on
the
other
end
of
that
spectrum,
where
you
now
also
have
a
wide
FOV
display
in
a
true
glasses
form
factor.
That,
coupled
one
day
with
always-on
sensors
and
contextualized
AI,
will
be
a
game-changer
for
personal
computing,
and
we
can’t
wait
to
share
more
on
that
work
in
the
coming
weeks.
Crowdsourced
Here’s
what
the
Installer
community
is
into
this
week.
I
want
to
know
what
you’re
into
right
now
as
well!
Email
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
or
message
me
on
Signal
— @davidpierce.11
—
with
your
recommendations
for
anything
and
everything,
and
we’ll
feature
some
of
our
favorites
here
every
week.
For
even
more
great
recommendations,
check
out
the
replies
to
this
post
on
Threads.
“I’ve
recently
picked
up
a
pair
of
the
brand-new
IK
Multimedia
MTM
MKII
studio
monitors,
and
I
am
BLOWN
AWAY
by
the
quality
of
the
sound.
They’ve
got
to
be
the
best-sounding
‘desk-friendly’
studio
audio
monitors
available.
They
literally
make
me
giddy
by
how
full
and
rich
and
accurate
they
sound.”
– Brooks
“I’m
giving
Mammoth
a
try,
and
it’s
quickly
becoming
my
favorite
Mastodon
client.
It
does
a
good
job
of
combining
the
firehose
with
curated
and
algorithmic
feeds.
And
the
UI
is
nice.”
–
Joseph
“I’m
running
out
of
iCloud
space
at
200GB.
I
have
18,500
files
in
my
Photos
app,
but
Apple
provides
no
way
to
tell
which
are
larger.
Turns
out,
the
trial
of
the
PowerPhotos
Mac
app
lets
you
sort
by
size
while
your
photos
are
still
in
the
cloud!
In
my
case,
just
500
files
take
up
100GB.
That’s
honestly
totally
feasible
to
sort
through
manually
and
will
give
me
back
50
percent
of
my
storage!”
– Nikolaj
“I’m
basically
just
watching
Chappell
Roan’s
VMA
performance
on
repeat.”
– Noah
“After
the
recent
ebook
versus
paper
book
debate
on
The
Vergecast,
I
wanted
to
point
to
Reader,
Come
Home
by
Maryanne
Wolf.
It’s
a
really
fascinating
dive
into
how
digital
reading
affects
the
brain
—
with
the
latter
half
focused
on
childhood
exposure.
Definitely
an
important
consideration!”
– Brad
“No
Rolls
Barred,
especially
“Monopoly,
but
Communist.”
The
channel
is
all
about
playing
board
games,
and
they
will
also
do
classic
games,
but
they
add
some
rules
or
use
the
board
game
as
a
base
and
essentially
make
a
completely
new
game
that
you
can
kind
of
relate
to
the
original
(“Monopoly,
but
Communist,”
for
example).”
–
Anthony
“Atlas
Creed
is
a
new
indie
author
that
I
really
enjoy.
He
self-published
a
crime
thriller
with
some
supernatural
elements
called
Armitage,
and
it’s
surprisingly
killer.
I
listened
to
the
audiobook,
and
the
narrators
do
a
great
job!
Not
terribly
important,
but
the
inside
cover
for
the
hardcover
is
sick,
too.”
–
Steve
“‘How
to
Monetize
a
Blog.’
Maybe
read
this
article
/
commentary
/
art
piece
/
disaster
on
desktop
instead
of
mobile?
It’s
worth
it.”
–
Hunter
“While
reading
the
most
recent
issue,
I
thought
of
a
video
essay
YouTube
channel
that
I
want
to
recommend.
The
channel
is
called
Summoning
Salt.
It
focuses
on
the
history
and
techniques
used
to
obtain
world
records
in
various
video
games.
The
videos
are
captivating,
and
the
narrator
does
a
fantastic
job
of
keeping
your
attention.
I
highly
recommend
it.”
– Grant
“After
a
successful
playtest,
friends
and
I
have
had
our
first
session
of
Daggerheart
this
week.
It’s
a
TTRPG,
like
D&D,
from
the
folks
at
Critical
Role.
The
mechanics
are
simpler,
and
it
focuses
on
collaborative
storytelling
and
quick
decisions.
It
feels
much
lighter
to
play
and
it’s
less
load
on
the
DM!
Highly
recommended
for
newbies,
too!”
– René
“I
don’t
usually
buy
new
games
at
full
price,
but
Astro
Bot
is
awesome!”
–
Sam
Signing
off
Sometimes
I
find
myself
in
a
brand-new
corner
of
YouTube.
Sometimes
it’s
like,
“Oh,
of
course
there
are
tons
of
people
doing
cool
gardening
tutorials
on
YouTube!”
But
sometimes,
like
what
happened
to
me
recently,
it’s
a
total
surprise.
I’ve
spent
a
lot
of
the
last
week
or
so
on
what
I
guess
you’d
call
“Short
Film
YouTube”
—
it’s
just
an
endless
supply
of
short,
simple
movies
on
every
topic
and
story
you
can
imagine:
horror
flicks;
inspirational
shorts;
extremely
meta
stories;
action
movies;
stories
about
coffee
runs
with
big-twist
endings;
student
films;
more
student
films;
so
many
student
films.
I
don’t
know
how
I
never
thought
to
look
for
this
before,
but
this
is
now
my
go-to
way
to
relax
when
I
have
a
few
minutes
to
kill.
And
if
you’ve
never
seen
“Nothing,
except
everything,”
you
should.
It’s
a
Short
Film
YouTube
classic.
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