Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 106, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If youโre new here, welcome, Happy Thanksgiving Week, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.)
This week, Iโve been reading about prediction markets and Hilary Duff and Matt Belloni and yeast, clearing space for a Steam Machine, playing News Tower thanks to Stephen Totiloโs recommendation, checking to make sure I remember all the Wicked lyrics (I do, donโt worry) before seeing For Good, giving up on my fantasy football team, and recording season two of Version History. Itโs a fun one.
I also have for you a new way to use your Windows computer, Googleโs new LLM, a documentary thatโll take up your whole weekend in the best way, and much more.
(As always, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. What are you reading / watching / playing / building / snacking on 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.)
- Raycast for Windows. Raycast โ a launcher, clipboard manager, shortcut system, and much more โ is the first app I install on any new Mac. Now itโs finally on Windows, too! Itโs not quite on par with the Mac app in this public beta, but itโs pretty close, and I suspect itโll make a lot of things about your computer better.
- Kirby Air Riders. I donโt think anyone expected this game, a Switch 2 sequel to a delightful but deeply weird GameCube title. Itโs a racing game, and a battle game, and it doesnโt let you do very much but also seems to be totally filled with havoc and chaos all the time. Perfect combo, if you ask me.
- Marvelโs Deadpool VR. I donโt remember the last time a new VR game caused me to actually get my Quest out of its charging stand. But this one, with Neil Patrick Harris voicing Deadpool and a lot of the same bonkers action energy as the movies, might just get me playing again.
- Gemini 3. Googleโs LLM appears to be among the best all-purpose models available right now, and you can use it practically everywhere. Itโs in the app, itโs in Search, you can use it to make apps and visualizations and all sorts of things. Googleโฆ might be winning.
- The Samsung Smart Keyboard. A super light, super small keyboard is a sneaky great travel accessory โ bring this and your phone or tablet, and youโll be amazed how much you can get done in a pinch without needing your laptop. You can find models cheaper than the $110 thisโll set you back, but the size and weight are hard to beat.
- Comet for Android. All the AI browsers seem to start on Apple devices โ and mostly just Macs โ so itโs good to see them spreading out to the rest of the ecosystem. Quick summaries and answers are actually a killer use case for a mobile browser.
- The American Revolution. Ken Burns alert! And a timely one, at that, as Burns drops a 12-hour history lesson on how the USA was created. Even the bits Iโve seen are complex and bound to make some people mad โ but nobody does this like Burns does it.
- โNASA Shares Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Images.โ NBD, just a bunch of data and images about a comet traveling from another freaking solar system. This stream is an hour long but totally worth it, and thereโs a great explainer on the NASA site too.
- The Analogue 3D. I have been waiting for this thing โ an Analogue console based on the Nintendo 64 โ for so long I had basically given up hoping it would ever ship. But now itโs shipping! The reviews are excellent, the games are plentiful, the only problem is this thing canโt seem to stay in stock.
At this point, my most-used device other than my phone is my Boox Palma. If youโve been reading this newsletter, or my other work, for a while, this will not surprise you. As a result, over the last couple of years I have become a lot of peopleโs Palma guide โ turns out Iโm not the only person sold on the idea of a more focused, minimalist device that fits in my pocket.
I just reviewed the new Palma 2 Pro (which I was excited about and super disappointed by), so I had occasion to rethink my Palma usage. I like where my new homescreen ended up, and ported it back to the Palma 2 I still like. I figured Iโd share. Here it is:
(Funny thing about that screenshot: It doesnโt look like that on my device! Itโs black and white on the Palmaโs E Ink screen. Looks much better that way.)
The wallpaper: Itโs called โTree,โ and itโs one of the built-in wallpapers. I had it blank for a while, but this one feels better to me for some reason.
The apps: Claude, NYT Games, MyMind, Libby, Roku, Kindle, Readwise Reader, Workflowy, Spotify, Pocket Casts.
Itโs pretty straightforward, really. Kindle and Libby for reading books, Reader for articles. Spotify for listening to music, Pocket Casts for podcasts. (I hate Spotify as a podcast app.) Workflowy for taking quick notes (itโs a very sparse app, which is perfect on the E Ink screen), MyMind for saving quotes, screenshots, and other snippets of stuff I come across. NYT Games because thatโs what I do in bed and this thing mostly lives by my bed. Claude in case I need to look something up โ Iโll do anything to avoid lots of typing on the Palma. And Roku as a backup TV remote in a pinch, which has come in handy more than once.
The only other app Iโve installed on the Palma is 1Password, but that doesnโt need to be on the homescreen. This setup does everything I need and precisely nothing else. Which is exactly what Iโm looking for.
Hereโs what the Installer community is into this week. I want to know what youโre into right now as well! Email installer@theverge.com or message me on Signal โ @davidpierce.11 โ with your recommendations for anything and everything, and weโll feature some of our favorites here every week. For even more great recommendations, check out the replies to this post on Threads and this post on Bluesky.
โJust replaced the battery in a 10 year old PS Vita with an iFixit kit and it took me like 20 minutes and was actually super fun.โ โ Jonathan
โAfter years of ignoring well-meant advice about this new and somehow unusual way to learn a language, I finally gave in and listened to a few short Language Transfer lessons. Iโve never been so completely captivated by a teaching method: seemingly nothing special, yet in reality a true game changer. By explaining how a language works through short conversations, you really grasp and learn it. I even adjusted my own language lessons (I teach in secondary education). Language Transfer is that good. And itโs free.โ โ Pieter
โCurrently reading this awesome coffee table book all about the Jordan Brand. Itโs about the advertising, his brand, the photography, etc., instead of his career as a player. The first chapter is about 40 years of his shoe evolution..โ โ Boukou
โRewatching Stranger Things season 1-4 before the last season drops next week.โ โ Alex
โIโve gotten into physical pocket notebooks again. I bought a Space Pen because itโs nice and small, and now keep a Field Notes notebook with me at all times and use it for everything: to-do lists, ideas, journaling, etc. Itโs quite addictive and I highly recommend it.โ โ Josh
โTrying out a new animated wallpaper app for Mac called Backdrop. Itโs the only one Iโve seen that unifies an animated wallpaper between your desktop and lock screen.โ โ Russ
โJust started reading Beyond a Boundary by CLR James. It is billed as THE GREATEST SPORTS BOOK EVER WRITTEN, but mostly got it because I enjoyed The Black Jacobins. Also the cover is easily top 5 all time (first place is forever the Penguin Galaxy version of The Left Hand of Darkness).โ โ Rich
โMy recommendation is for Cyberspace.online. Itโs social media, but text based; like when the internet was good. I havenโt had this much fun online since 2007 with the original Tumblr!โ โ Jordan
โWriting to recommend the Rock Planner app for iPad. Itโs buggy, itโs primitive, BUT โ and I hope youโre ready for this โ you can annotate your calendar entries! It displays your calendar then allows you to write on it with the pencil. Even has a to-do section next to it. It was made by the people who created the Rock paper and pencil tip (highly recommended btw).โ โ Mario
We live in weird times, where itโs often hard to know whatโs real and what isnโt. When I first saw a photo of a skydiver in front of the sun, I just filed it under โAIโ and went about my day. But I was wrong! What it is instead is one of the most remarkable photos Iโve ever seen: a shot with remarkable detail that required an astonishing amount of planning and very human creativity. And the photographer, Andrew McCarthy โ who you might know as @cosmic_background on Instagram โ has a portfolio full of similarly awe-inspiring work. My favorite follow in a while.


