The app for taking better photos — with no AI

  News, Rassegna Stampa
image_pdfimage_print

Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 48, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you’re new here, welcome, get ready for a lot of books this week, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.) 

I’m back after a couple of weeks off — thanks to everyone who wished me a good vacation and sent over book recommendations! I wound up reading Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore, She Rides Shotgun, and The Wager and highly recommend all three. Mostly, I spent two weeks chasing a toddler around various restaurants and playgrounds, and it was a good time, but I am oh so very glad to be back hanging with all of you. And it turns out I missed a lot of good stuff!

This week, I’ve been reading about Worldcoin and Conan O’Brien, watching Bad Monkey and rewatching The Night Manager, tweaking my recipe for a maple syrup Old Fashioned, listening to 99 Percent Invisible’s excellent series on The Power Broker, rebooting all my fantasy football leagues, and trying my damndest to switch from Spotify to YouTube Music.

I also have for you a new way to take smartphone photos, a new-ish HBO smash, a new podcast app, a clever use of AI for your notes, and much more. Let’s get into it.

(As always, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. What are you into right now? What should everyone else be reading / watching / playing / buying / 3D printing? Tell me everything: installer@theverge.com. And if you know someone else who might enjoy Installer, tell them to subscribe here.)

  • Halide’s Process Zero. Halide was already one of the best camera apps for iPhone and iPad, but this feature — which strips out all the processing your phone does and gives you as raw an image as possible — is just so much fun to play with. Give it a whirl this weekend. (A lot of you also sent this in — thanks to everyone who did!)
  • The Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold. The name is bad. The phone looks awesome. Google seems to have gotten the foldable phone design pretty right this time, and using Gemini side by side with an app is actually a great case for a larger screen. There are lots of new Pixel devices this week, but I’m most excited about the Fold.
  • Gemini Live. Big week for chatty voice assistants! OpenAI rolled out Advanced Voice Mode for ChatGPT, which is both cool and creepy. And Google showed off Gemini Live, which, well, same. I’m curious to see if either of these can go from nifty novelty to actually useful feature.
  • Alien: Romulus. I honestly don’t care if this movie’s any good. (And the reviews so far are… pretty mixed.) I’m thrilled to have a reason to get back into the Alien universe, and you better believe I’ll be seeing this in the biggest, loudest theater I can find.
  • First Look Inside Blue Origin’s New Glenn Factory w/ Jeff Bezos!I’m embarrassed to say I hadn’t watched any Everyday Astronaut videos before this one crossed my recommendations. I learned a ton from this long, deep, truly wild factory tour. Insta-subscribe.
  • Meta Quest HDMI Link. If we’ve learned anything from the Vision Pro this year, it’s that VR headsets are just really, really big televisions. Meta’s new app means you can plug almost anything in and use your headset as the big screen it’s meant to be.
  • Unread for Mac. This one’s like two weeks old, but I was on vacation, so I just saw it: my favorite RSS reader for iOS is now on the Mac, and it’s great. Fast, simple, nice to look at, works with everything, instantly part of my day-to-day workflow.
  • Industry season 3. It took a while for this HBO show to get its flowers, but it totally deserves the belated love. It has some of the same chaotic energy as Succession, lots of the money and bad behavior, and plenty of good-looking people doing hateable stuff. Takes a couple of episodes to really get going, but it’s great once it does.
  • Neuecast. I actually like the new Overcast design, but evidently, not everyone’s a fan. And if, for whatever reason, you’re looking for a new podcast app, this is a gorgeous, simple one that’s remarkably full-featured for being so new. I’ve been testing it for months, and it’s been good basically the whole time.

Earlier this summer, I mentioned how much I‘d been enjoying the Niagara Launcher, a minimalist Android launcher that reinvents your homescreen into something much more manageable and straightforward. And I heard from so many of you that you like it, too!