The much simpler way to keep track of everything

  News, Rassegna Stampa
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Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 55, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you’re new here, welcome, get ready to ruin your phone’s storage, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.) 

This week, I’ve been reading about AI girlfriends and Bobbi Althoff and baseball pitchers, watching Nobody Wants This (my favorite new show in forever) and the new noodle-focused Chef’s Table (a long-standing fave), falling in love with Coldplay all over again, listening to John Oliver talk journalism, playing a lot of Alphaguess, and painstakingly moving all my junk to my new blue iPhone 16. It’s so pretty.

I also have for you a handy new way to track your stuff, a great app for posting to social media, a smart new way to manage your life on Apple devices, a new anime worth watching on Netflix, a new version of the best smart ring, 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 playing/reading / watching / eating / 3D printing / building from Legos this week? Tell me everything: installer@theverge.com. And if you know someone else who might enjoy Installer, tell them to subscribe here.)

  • The Pebblebee Clip Universal. This tracker works with both Apple’s Find My and Google’s Find My Device systems, which is just such an obviously good and correct idea! For a multiplatform person or family, this is a way better buy than a bunch of AirTags.
  • Croissant. We may not live in the full everything-everywhere, fediverse-y social world I want, but at least cross-posting is getting easier. This is a really nice-looking iOS app that lets you post simultaneously to Threads, Bluesky, and Mastodon. It’s also just really nice to type in.
  • The Raspberry Pi AI Camera. This is going to be a tinkerer’s paradise: a $70 camera with a built-in AI processor that you can use for machine vision, automated photo-taking, and lots more. I can’t wait to see what people build with this.
  • Arc Search for Android. Arc’s still my go-to browser, and it’s getting easier to commit to that as the company comes to more platforms. This one is still very much in beta, but I have it on my Pixel Fold and it’s working pretty well so far.
  • How I Replaced Notion with Reminders, Numbers, and Notes. So, so, so many of you sent this to me this week! Joan Westenberg’s deep dive into Apple’s productivity tools is really smart and detailed and is probably the way most people should manage their lives.
  • Microsoft Copilot. Sure, I’m a sucker for a warm-shaded website and some calming illustrations, but I really like the new look of Microsoft’s AI bot. And I like that Microsoft is looking at Copilot less like a work tool and more like a handy personal helper.
  • The Oura Ring 4. I like the Oura Ring a lot, but it’s always been just a bit too chunky to feel truly comfortable on my finger. This one has some neat-sounding new features and improvements, but mostly, it seems to be significantly smaller. (And has lost the little flat-tire edge, which is a victory in its own right.)
  • Dan Da Dan. A new anime that is by just about all accounts both a really fun story about ghosts and aliens and high school and a remarkable achievement in animation. Fans have been waiting for a new title this good for a while, and it sounds like everything we could have hoped for.
  • ChatGPT Canvas. We are, slowly but surely, getting out of the chatbot era of AI models. This looks a lot like Claude’s Artifacts feature in that it lets you make something from scratch and then edit it in place with the model’s help. It’s fun! And useful!
  • The Franchise. The premise of this show — a fictionalized behind-the-scenes look at the cast and crew making a big-budget superhero movie — reminds me a bit of the show Unreal. And I LOVE Unreal. The reviews here aren’t all great, but I’ll be watching anyway.

I love when I ask someone to share their homescreen with us and realize I have absolutely no idea what it might look like. Kyle Wiens, the CEO of iFixit, was one of those people: he’s a tinkerer and a builder and an obvious tech fiend, so I thought he might have a million apps and widgets and everything customized just so. But he’s also a big believer in right to repair and keeping your gadgets working forever, so maybe he’d have, like, a BlackBerry from 2004 that was still somehow up and running?