Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 42, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If youâre new here, welcome, so psyched you found us, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.)Â
Technology
The super simple gadget trying to replace your phone
Plus: the new Apple Passwords app, House of the Dragon season 2, Yahoo News, Fantasmas, Moonbound by Robin Sloan, and more in this week’s Installer newsletter.
This week, Iâve been writing about Excel, reading about tin foil hats and the song âSmooth,â obsessing over Francis Ford Coppolaâs note-taking system, watching Anyone But You, Hit Man, and Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol because I had a bunch of plane rides, and debating buying Jabra headphones even though Jabra is quitting the headphone game.
I also have for you a new minimalist phone, a book to read, a documentary to watch, a fun hack for your Rabbit R1, and much more. Letâs get into it.
(As always, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. What are you playing, reading, downloading, buying, or bedazzling this week? What are you into that everyone else should be into? Tell me everything: installer@theverge.com. And if you know someone else who might enjoy Installer, tell them to subscribe here.)
The Drop
Screen share
Andrew Liszewski has long been one of my favorite bloggers on the internet. He spent years at Gizmodo writing about the weirdest, funniest, silliest, coolest stuff on the web, and Iâve definitely spent thousands of dollars on stuff just because he wrote about it.
Now, Andrew works for The Verge! This was his first week, and heâs already in Slack causing chaos. Itâs the best. I asked him to share his homescreen with us to see if I could get any tips on how he scours the web. He didnât reveal all his secrets, but I do know more about the weather in Canada now, so thatâs something.
Hereâs Andrewâs homescreen, plus some info on the apps he uses and why:
The phone: iPhone 12 Pro (with a battery thatâs feeling its age).
The wallpaper: I like a very minimalist wallpaper under my apps, but because I find solid black makes the screen too reflective, I created a custom subtle blue gradient Iâve been using for the past five years. (For my lock screen, Iâm using one of Mikael Gustafssonâs dreamy nature scenes.)
The apps: Google Calendar, Clock, Photos, Camera, Google Home, Google Photos, Find My, Instagram, Google Maps, WeatherCAN, Nest, Google Chat, Settings, Watch, Chrome, Apple Books, 1Password, App Store, Apple Notes, Phone, Gmail, Messages, Apple Photos.
My iPhoneâs main homescreen is where all my daily driver apps live. This includes Instagram, Google Home, the aging Nest app (which includes functionality for my Nest thermostat I canât find elsewhere), Chrome, 1Password (which all but solved my password anxiety once I finally switched over), IMDb, Paprika 3, countless smart home remotes, and most importantly, the Environment Canada weather app so I know when to get the grass cut before it rains. Iâm obsessive about clearing notifications on my primary homescreen but am happy for them to pile up on the second screen, where I like to keep all other installed apps accessible.
I also asked Andrew to share a few things heâs into right now. Hereâs what he sent back:
Crowdsourced
Hereâs what the Installer community is into this week. I want to know what youâre into right now as well! Email installer@theverge.com or message me on Signal â @davidpierce.11 â with your recommendations for anything and everything, and weâll feature some of our favorites here every week. For more recommendations than I could fit here, check out the replies to this post on Threads.
âI just recently came across this Australian company called Juicy Crumb that specializes in creating custom motherboard replacements for old iMacs, which lets people easily repurpose them as monitors. And they made one for the iMac G4! Believe me when I tell you Iâve never hit a âbuyâ button so quickly (lol). Anyway, I ordered one a few months back and recently swapped it into my 20-inch G4, and it worked like a charm! I plugged it into a M1 Mac Mini I had, and now Iâm using an iMac G4 like itâs 2004 again.â â Ryan
âI LOVE the Surface kickstand, enjoy typing onscreen (have done it for 14 years, tbf), and hate cases on my Apple devices. Iâm obsessed with this magnet-back cover with a kickstand for my iPad. Could only source it from Amazon Germany, but they shipped to New Zealand for free. Wicked result.â â Brendon
âYour mention of Inbox Ten makes me think youâd appreciate Tony Hsiehâs Yesterbox method, which Iâve used successfully for years!â â Deb
âIâve been loving journaling in Diarium, especially since itâs completely private and local. If you want to sync between devices, you can use a cloud sync of your choosing â it can even read-only sync with apps like Fitbit, Instagram, Strava, etc. to add everything youâve done in the day into your journal entry.â â Michael
âI recently subscribed to Scott Belskyâs Implications newsletter, and Iâm convinced everyone who is interested in the future of tech and culture should, too.â â Ricky
âI just discovered the app Crouton for recipe collection, and itâs by far the best at scrubbing a URL for the actual recipe. You can even take a photo of a cookbook page, and itâll generate the recipe. Probably the best example of a real-world use for AI Iâve encountered yet.â â JT
âIâm enjoying the new MLB Morning Lineup podcast. Each episode is 10 minutes or less, and it recaps the previous dayâs box scores and news. Itâs been a very nice way to catch up on the best sport.â â Mario
âBeen trying out Star Wars: Hunters on iOS after it finally launched. Itâs a PVP arena combat game, and Iâm loving it so far. The hunters are all unique and fun, itâs not too heavy on the pay-to-play stuff, and itâs remarkably good for a quick game. Itâs not perfect (the UI is atrocious), but itâs a good start.â â Matt
âPuzzmo just added a new game to their catalog, Pile-Up Poker, and it is stellar.â â Luke
âMy friends introduced me to this Call of Duty-like shooter thatâs apparently very popular in India. Itâs called Free Fire Max. The reason for its popularity is its ability to run on any device.
You should give it a try. The graphics are mediocre, but the experience is great.â â Rudrajit
Signing off
I posted on Threads a few days ago that my number one productivity hack is to take a 25-minute nap in the middle of the day. This made a lot of people have feelings and ask questions, even though Iâm totally right. (Itâs just science. I donât make the rules.) But for all the people who asked for tips, here are mine.Â
The perfect 25-minute nap involves three things. First, realizing that even if you donât sleep, lying there with your eyes closed for 25 minutes is still very restful; not stressing about sleeping makes it easier to sleep. Second, an episode of a TV show Iâve seen before (I do a lot of Parks and Recreation) can make it easier to quiet my brain and fall asleep. Third, I put on my smartwatch and set an alarm there; waking up from a wrist buzz is infinitely better than a blaring sound. Naps are great, naps forever, happy napping, everybody.
See you next week!