Two new must-have Android apps

  News, Rassegna Stampa
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Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 46, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you’re new here, welcome, hope you like silly gadgets, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.) 

This week, I’ve been writing about Apple betas and AR gadgets, reading about Donald Glover and the scourge of meetings and what it takes to feed the Olympics, admiring Christian Selig’s keyboard layout, watching Hard Knocks and The Beekeeper, and trying (and failing) to perfect my blueberry muffin recipe.

I also have for you a couple of great iOS apps that are finally available on Android, a new way to play some classic Nintendo games, an expensive new camera, and stuff to watch this weekend both at home and in theaters.

This week’s a little heftier than usual, both because there’s a lot going on and because I’m getting ready to go on vacation. Installer will come as usual next week and then off for two weeks before we’re back on August 17th ready to rumble. So, just in case you’d otherwise run out of stuff to do, I figured I’d leave you with some extras. Let’s get into it.

(As always, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. What do you want to know more about? What awesome tricks do you know that everyone else should? What app should everyone be using? 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.)

  • Notion Calendar for Android. I still really hate the app icon, but other than that, this is one of the best-looking and generally sharpest calendar apps out there. It’s especially great if you’re also a Notion user, but even if not, I think it’s an upgrade on Google Cal.
  • Claude for Android. Over and over the last few weeks, I’ve been hearing people talk about how much they like Claude 3.5 Sonnet — even more than they like ChatGPT. I like Claude’s app a lot, too, especially its ability to import and understand screenshots.
  • The TinyPod. It’s a case for an Apple Watch that makes it look like an iPod, and even as I type that, it sounds totally ridiculous. But you better believe I will be buying this thing and seeing if it turns my Watch into the music-playing, message-sending dumbphone of my dreams.
  • Wild Wild Space. We think of space as, like, a grand beautiful unknown. But in so many ways, it’s becoming just another place for companies to try and conquer. This HBO series (based on a great Ashlee Vance book) is a particularly epic — and somewhat terrifying? — startup story.
  • UTM SE. I would’ve happily bet you $10 that Apple would never approve an app that just straight-up emulates a Windows computer. I’m glad to have lost that bet! UTM SE can do retro games, but it can also do all kinds of other stuff. (Just don’t expect it to, like, actually replace your computer.)
  • EA Sports College Football 25. After 11 years, it’s back and apparently as good as ever. The story of this game is a hilariously perfect tale about the internet, capitalism, and fame, but ultimately, I’m just excited to finally turn my alma mater into the football juggernaut it very much is not.
  • Overcast. A big update this week to one of the best podcast apps for Apple devices. Marco Arment, the developer, is right when he says it’s noticeably faster in almost every way, and Overcast does things like Smart Speed and volume enhancement better than anything else. 
  • The Canon R5 Mark II. Photographers and camera nerds have been waiting for this one for a while, and with good reason. The R5 II is faster for photos, more functional for video, and has a new autofocus system that sounds pretty great. $4,300 ain’t cheap, but awesome cameras never are.
  • Nintendo World Championships: NES Edition. A bunch of classic video games, chopped up and put back together into tiny new pieces all designed to be played at blisteringly fast speeds. Such a cool idea and a great new spin on some old faves.
  • Skywalkers: A Love Story. I can’t get enough of those YouTube videos of people parkouring their way around skyscrapers and abandoned buildings, even if they do stress me out. This Netflix doc is a lot of that kind of stuff and a love story, all in one.
  • Dyson’s OnTrac headphones. Glad to see Dyson go a little less, uh, Bane-ish with its second set of headphones. The OnTrac are super expensive — $500! — but look pretty good, and I’m rooting for anything going this hard on customization.
  • Twisters. Here’s a weekend plan for you. This afternoon, watch Twister, which holds up shockingly well 28 years later. (The effects still rip, too.) Tonight, go see Twisters, which has gotten solid reviews and looks like exactly the kind of movie that should be seen in a huge, loud movie theater. Then, hit me up and tell me if you liked it. Sound like a plan?

Ryan Gilbert runs one of the newsletters I read every single week. It’s called Workspaces, and every week, it features some interesting person talking about how they work and how they’ve set up their desk to work for them. I am, uh, forever obsessed with desk setups and never tire of seeing how other people think about their spaces.