Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 58, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If youâre new here, welcome, Batman forever, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.)Â
Technology
The VR game I’ve been waiting for
Plus: the Boox Palma 2, a new version of the Vivaldi browser and the Inoreader RSS app, Anthropic’s new computer use feature, and more in this week’s Installer.
This week, Iâve been reading about Simone Giertz and billionaire assistants and Checo Pérez and Call Her Daddy, learning about âEarthrise,â listening to Quinta Brunson and Conan OâBrien talk comedy, trying to decide whether to get super into Bluesky or just quit social altogether, and throwing myself into baseball so I can pretend I know what Iâm talking about during the World Series.
I also have for you an excellent new VR game, a delightful new reading gadget, a nice RSS reader update, a new browser worth trying, and much more.
(As always, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. What are you into right now? What does everyone else need to be watching / reading / playing / baking / cutting up with scissors this week? Tell me everything: installer@theverge.com. And if you know someone else who might enjoy Installer, forward it to them and tell them to subscribe here.)
The Drop
Screen share
I reviewed the new iPad Mini this week and, as a result, spent a bunch of time setting up a new tablet and thinking a lot about how to organize the homescreen. Iâve deliberately kept this space phone-centric so far, because I really think you can tell a lot about a person just by looking at their phone, but after spending all that time thinking about my iPad life, Iâm wondering if I need to broaden the scope a little bit. Maybe I should get people to share, like, their computer desktops? Or their game console homescreens? Maybe the first screen of their smart TVs? I donât know, there are a lot of homescreens out there. Weâll try some stuff.
All that said, hereâs my iPad Mini homescreen, plus some info on the apps Iâm using and why:
The tablet: iPad Mini, 2024. I love the iPad Mini. I wish this one were a lot better and that Apple would care about the Mini a lot more, but here we are.
The wallpaper: Appleâs weather wallpaper, which adapts to the current weather outside. Itâs a total gimmick, and I am shocked at how much I love it.
The apps: Balatro, Madden, EA Sports FC, Retro Goal, Retro Bowl, Delta, Call of Duty: Warzone, Coffee Golf, Real Racing 3, Tiny Wings, NYT Games, The New York Times, Apple News, The Washington Post, Unread, Netflix, TikTok, Disney Plus, Prime Video, Sling, YouTube, Peacock, Max, Hulu, ESPN, Arc, Kindle, Workflowy, Readwise Reader, Pocket Casts, Spotify, Mela.
I feel like there are two ways you can go with your iPad. You can use it to try and do laptop things, or you can decide to use your iPad mostly as a way to avoid doing laptop things. Iâve picked the latter: roughly 100 percent of my iPad use is reading, watching, and playing. I donât have Gmail or Slack or Google Docs on here; nothing is allowed to send me notifications. My iPad is a place for relaxation and fun, period.
I like and use all these apps, but there are a few to call out specifically: Iâve tried a lot of recipe apps, and Mela is still the simplest and the best at pulling recipes out of websites; Balatro is the most addicting game Iâve downloaded in years; I finally became an Apple News Plus subscriber and am blown away by how much Iâm using it; the iPad Mini is the perfect tablet to use as a steering wheel, and Real Racing 3 is a fabulous driving game.Â
My dock is reserved for the apps I use at least close to every day, which means itâs reading, notes, recipes, podcasts, and music. (I just realized I should move Workflowy, so itâs not between the reading apps â Iâll get to that.) The most-used non-dock app right now is probably Peacock, which has Community and Parks and Recreation and Brooklyn Nine-Nine and is, thus, the streaming service I have on in the background basically all the time.
For years, I tried to turn my iPad into something like a laptop replacement. But the more Iâve leaned into it being a purely recreational device, the screen for when I donât want to be stressed out by screens, the more I find myself using it. Itâs a weird and expensive strategy, but itâs working for me.
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 even more great recommendations, check out the replies to this post on Threads.
âI saw Adi ask for a Goodreads alternative and wanted to suggest The StoryGraph! Itâs really great at showcasing stats about what you read, rather than the updates-sharing focus of GR, and it has really nice monthly summaries!â â Aurora
âReading about Adiâs suffering with LibraryThing, I remembered that just a few days ago, I started using Hardcover, and so far, Iâm finding it really cool.â â AH
âTaskly is a very straightforward list app for iOS with absolutely nothing else. I have been looking for something to manage my grocery list or just things I need to buy. Twodos is another such app, except it has a very clever way to separate the list into two categories: Sooner and Later. Thatâs something I really love about it.â â Karan
âI just put about six hours into Wagotabi, and Iâm wildly impressed. It is one of the most clever and effective Japanese learning games Iâve ever played. Itâs structured like Pokémon, but instead of catching monsters, youâre learning Japanese words and grammar. Instead of battling, youâre engaging in social interactions that put your new skills to the test. Over time, it replaces more and more English text with Japanese. And itâs genuinely fun! Duolingo be damned; Wagotabi is the king.â â Tom
âI grabbed a Steam Deck OLED a few weeks back and have been diving into games I just kind of missed. Uncharted 4 and Uncharted: The Lost Legacy were great. Now digging into the modern Tomb Raider trilogy. I guess I like adventure games when FIFA isnât available.â â Andi
âI upgrade phones every two to three years, and one way I keep it fresh is to get a new case every year. This yearâs case upgrade was from Keyway Designs. They make gorgeous wood and metal phone cases (and other goodies). Check them out!â â Bill
âTrying a new second brain app, Sublime, that adds a few interesting features. Will try for a few weeks and see how it grows on me.â â Miguel
âI have a seriously good Switch controller for you: the GuliKit Zen Pro is awesome, supports everything the Pro Controller does, and has Hall effect sticks to boot. Itâs also a lot cheaper than the Pro Controller, so Iâd recommend it for anyone buying a new Switch, too!â â Ben
âIâve been using Capture for iOS, and itâs low-key amazing. Like should be a built-in feature-level amazing. Anything I come across online, I can set aside, hold it off to the side, and then send it where it needs to go later.â â Max
âThe premise of MovieCart is simple: itâs for watching full-length movies on an actual Atari 2600. The reality is quite complex. Itâs the work of a mad genius, and you may feel like one, too, once you actually get a film running!â â Tom
Signing off
Approximately every single person on the internet has been talking about the Chicken Shop Date episode with Andrew Garfield, which really is as charming as you can imagine. (Garfield has a history of great YouTube moments, like his convo about grief with Stephen Colbert.) The episode sent me down the rabbit hole of all things Chicken Shop Date, and it turns out, host Amelia Dimoldenberg has been through a truly fascinating ride as a creator.
Last year, she did a great interview with Colin and Samir, which doubles as a (very funny and silly) masterclass in how to turn a YouTube channel into a show at the very center of pop culture. All my favorite creator stories are equal parts ruthless execution and constant aimless experimentation, and Dimoldenberg is a perfect example of both.
See you next week!