A super-simple way to organize your internet

  News, Rassegna Stampa
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Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 4, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you’re new here, first of all, hi hello welcome, and second of all, you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.) 

I’ve been sick a good chunk of this week, so my internet experience has been significantly more couch-based and horizontal than usual. I’ve been watching Twisted Metal and doing my umpteenth rewatch of Superstore, devouring this delightful documentary about the Apple Newton, reading about the booming product-return industry and the unmasking of a huge ransomware gang, buying just about everything on The Verge’s “cheap stuff that doesn’t suck” list, listening to the ultra-chaotic new podcast from a bunch of late-night hosts, and worrying about all my Apple gadgets dying now that the iPhone 15 launch is only two weeks away.

Also this week, I have for you a bunch of cool stuff about old video games, another step toward ultra-repairable smartphones, the smart speaker that might just make assistants work, a way to keep your online life organized with basically no work, and Victoria Song’s homescreen. Let’s get to 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.)

  • Starfield. A big, huge, epic, giant, massive sci-fi game that actually seems to live up to the hype. This is more of an “explore the universe” kind of game than a “shoot the bad guy” game, but that’s all the more reason you might find yourself spending way too many hours playing. Early access is already underway, and the game launches for real on Wednesday.
  • Can You Start a YouTube channel in 2023? I could watch Marques Brownlee and Cleo Abram talk about the mechanics of running and growing a YouTube channel for hours. MKBHD and Huge If True are two excellent channels, obviously, and it’s fun to hear them talk about storytelling, fighting with algorithms, and not getting stuck.
  • Obscura 4. I’ve always been kind of dubious of custom iPhone camera apps — the built-in one is good and so much easier to access and more reliable — but the new Obscura has me reconsidering. (MacStories has a good breakdown of everything that’s new.) All the gestures and dials do take some getting used to, but they put a million controls right in front of you as you shoot. Plus, the app is just lovely to look at.
  • The Big Flop: Quibi Bites the Dust. It’s so perfect and funny that you can tell the whole story of Quibi in one 37-minute podcast episode that is actually mostly just jokes about Quibi’s bad shows. But this is actually a pretty good recap and — call me crazy! — sort of convinced me that Quibi didn’t miss by too much. Other than the name. Good lord, the name.
  • One Piece on Netflix. The long-awaited live-action remake of One Piece, a popular manga and anime series, now has its full first season streaming on Netflix. The Verge’s Charles Pulliam-Moore says it’s one of the best anime adaptations yet, and I saw another review that called it a cross between Pirates of the Caribbean and Scott Pilgrim vs. The World. Sold and sold.  
  • Aboard. A new app from Rich Ziade and Paul Ford, two people who tend to make good apps. The best way I can describe this one is “Trello meets Pinterest meets Google Sheets” — you can just dump in URLs, notes, images, spreadsheets, whatever, and organize it all in one place, alone or with others. The app is fairly barebones but already really nice to use. 
  • The Making of Karateka. It’s a documentary, and also a video game, about the making of a video game. (The Verge’s Andrew Webster wrote a great story about it this week.) It’s like a choose-your-own-adventure movie, in which you can pick the parts you care about or just watch the story through — and then play the game at the end. It rules! I’d never even heard of this game, and I loved the doc just the same.
  • Ollie’s Arcade. Big week for old video games! This new iOS app is just a simple store for some simple retro games — so far, Snake, Ollie Soars (a Flappy Bird-style game), and a space-explorer game called Tranquility Touchdown. No ads, no sneaky subscriptions, just fun games for a couple bucks. If only all mobile games worked like this.
  • The Analog Weekly planner. I’ve been a fan of Jeff Sheldon and Ugmonk for a long time, and the standard Analog productivity system is one of those ridiculously luxurious things — it’s just paper and a paper holder, and it’s expensive! — that feels totally worth it. This new weekly planner looks great, and planning my life like this always makes my brain feel better.

I’ve gotten a lot of emails, posts, and messages the last few weeks all around a similar topic, which happens to be a thing I am personally fascinated by! So let’s do a slightly different thing in this space this week: instead of tips from the super experts, here’s a thing you can do this weekend that’ll make your online life better. We’ll do this from time to time, so if you have ideas, let me know!