Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 107, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If youโre new here, welcome, hope youโre having a lovely and long weekend, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.)
This week, Iโve been reading about Faker and Chinese EVs and art thieves, shopping for cool acoustic tiles for my new home office, using a night-light app to surprisingly useful effect, testing the Pebble 2 Duo, devouring the Colossus series from Search Engine, finally starting to watch Pluribus, wrestling with the dumb app for my dumb new thermostat, moving some of my browsing habits to Kagiโs Orion, and finally reconnecting all my smart home gear to an Echo Dot Max. And, as much as possible, Iโve been trying to disconnect and hang out with my family. Or at least sit near them and look at my phone, which totally counts.
I also have for you the biggest thing to hit Netflix this year, a rad-looking new comic series, the latest and greatest version of Claude, and much more. Short week, big stuff to get to! Letโs do it.
(As always, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. What are you playing / reading / watching / shopping for / baking at 400 degrees 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.)
- Stranger Things season 5. Stranger Things occupies such a strange place in my brain. It has never been my favorite thing on TV, but I have devoured every season of it, and I canโt wait for the new season to start. Be prepared, though: itโs eight episodes, but itโsโฆ a lot more than eight hours.
- Alton Brown Cooks Food. One of the all-time great TV cooking hosts is back, and doing it big on YouTube. The first episode, about cooking turkey, feels somehow both like a TV show and like a perfect YouTube video. Heโs still got it.
- The Beatles Anthology 2025. The original version of this series, from 30 years ago โ which includes music, a documentary, and a book โ was one of the things that made me love The Beatles in the first place. This version has been remastered, includes even more stuff, and is required consumption for any music fan anywhere.
- Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery. Rian Johnson, Daniel Craig, and the rest of the Knives Out gang just donโt seem to miss. This oneโs headed to theaters for a couple of weeks before hitting Netflix December 12th, and if I can I plan to see it in both places. I love a good whodunit, and these keep being good whodunits.
- Galactic. Iโve seen this new comic series compared to Star Wars, True Romance, Tarantino movies, and a dozen other things. Itโs violent, itโs sci-fi, itโs romance, it sounds pretty awesome.
- Amazon Leo Ultra. Amazonโs Starlink competitor is finally shaping up to be a real thing, and a good thing at that: this new antenna doesnโt have a price yet but does promise up to 1Gbps of download speeds. If youโre shopping for satellite internet anytime soon, this could be a winner.
- โDo You Feel Guilty about Bad Reviews?โ Two top-notch creators, Michael Fisher and Marques Brownlee, talking about AI and politics and the creator economy and life after platforms. So much to learn in this for anyone interested in tech, or life as a creator.
- Xbox Crocs. Listen, I like a silly brand integration as much as the next guy, but this? This is next level. Itโs Crocs! With buttons! And joysticks! If I can get my hands on a pair these will become my official Gaming Footwear.
- Claude Opus 4.5. Claude is consistently one of the best all-around LLMs, but generally what I hear is that it is at its best when itโs coding. And Opus 4.5 appears to be a big step up in what Claude Code can do. Time to finally finish vibe-coding my perfect productivity app, maybe?
I love a gift guide, at any time of year. Most of my favorites (other than The Vergeโs, of course, which is the all-time great and I will hear no other opinions) tend to be just a single person saying, โhereโs some stuff I like!โ Robin Sloan does great gift guides. So does Helen Rosner. Max Read, too. Iโve found so many things I love because people I like say theyโre good.
In that spirit, I come to you with a gift guide that is not remotely scientific or representative of anything, but is instead just a bunch of stuff I like. This is all stuff Iโve paid for with my own money, not just tested with a loaner device from a company. Itโs all stuff I like and recommend wholeheartedly. And for the most part, itโs all pretty affordable. So hereโs my gift guide for 2025:
- The Nintendo Switch 2. Hands down the best gadget I bought this year. If this thing only played Mario Kart World, Donkey Kong Bananza, and Kirby Air Riders, Iโd probably still be happy with it. But the library is huge! And getting huger! Iโm gaming every day in a way I havenโt in a long time.
- The POP Phone. Hands down the silliest gadget I bought this year, that nevertheless brings me tremendous joy. It plugs into a USB-C port (presumably on your phone) and gives you that old-school landline feel. Way more comfortable than pressing my phone to my ear, and sounds good too.
- Baseus USB cables. Iโm still carrying around two of these retractable beasts as my only two charging cables, and itโs still working great. Though I confess, I am tempted by the model that also has the charging brick built in.
- The Hoto Electric Screwdriver. I swear, this is the Black Friday deal of the year every year, and I completely get why. Itโs powerful enough for most simple tasks, charges via USB-C, lasts forever โ itโs my most-used tool by a mile. (You can spend more to get one with a screen, butโฆ why.)
- The Doorman. The most un-put-down-able book I read this year. It unfolds in the most unusual way, and almost seems like it canโt possibly all come together in a satisfying way. But oh, boy, does it ever.
- The Logitech UE Wonderboom. There are a million Bluetooth speakers out there, but nothing beats this squat little dude when it comes to battery life, durability, waterproofing, and sound quality. I have one in the bathroom, one in my travel bag, and oneโฆ somewhere else. I lost it. Itโll turn up.
- Acquire. I rediscovered this decades-old board game this year, and was reminded of how much I love it! Itโs a simple premise โ youโre building and merging hotel chains, one building at a time โ but it requires exactly the right amount of thinking and strategy.
- Wits & Wagers. My family randomly encountered this game at a winery one weekend, and it was a huge hit. Itโs sort of a trivia game, sort of a betting game, sort of Apples to Apples-ish. I canโt remember a game that went over this well with my entire family.
- Googleโs Pixel Buds 2a. I donโt know what it is about these headphones. I have so many other headphones! But I keep picking these. Theyโre small and light, sound good, feel good in my ears, and if Iโm honest, I really do love the purple.
- The Away Overnight Bag. If Iโm traveling for between 12 hours and four days, this is the bag I take. It has a few pockets and a laptop sleeve, and a surprisingly roomy spot for all my clothes.
- Philips Hue Essential bulbs. I bought a bunch of these just recently, at my colleague Jen Tuohyโs recommendation, and theyโre exactly what I need: relatively affordable, easy to set up, compatible with everything. I donโt want to think at all about my lightbulbs, you know? I donโt think about these anymore.
- The Brick. For some reason, this thing just works for me: I have a Brick in my office and another in the kitchen, and just by tapping my phone on the little cube Iโm able to turn my phone to a more minimalist mode. I should use it more, but I use it a lot.
- The M4 Mac Mini. This is obviously a bigger purchase, but it is also the computer I recommend to almost everyone looking to upgrade their desktop. This combination of price and power is absolutely ridiculous โ I have one as my daily driver and I couldnโt be happier.
One other note on shopping this weekend: there are obviously lots of good sales running, for Black Friday and Cyber Monday and whatever we call this shopping season that now lasts approximately four weeks. But Iโd argue the best thing you can buy right now is streaming services. Theyโre all constantly raising prices, but almost all offer a terrific deal on an annual subscription right about now. The deeply confusing future of television is a lot more palatable at half price.
Now itโs your turn: send me the stuff youโre buying for others and hoping they buy for you! Next weekโs Installer is going to be even more gift-y.
I first met Naveen Gavini a couple of years ago, when he was Pinterestโs chief product officer. I donโt remember what he wanted to talk about the first time we spoke, but I do remember that he showed me an app on his phone, and his homescreen included a bunch of apps Iโd never heard of. That doesnโt happen very often!
Now, Naveen is the CEO of a new company called BuildForever, which just launched its first product: an email app called Extra that aims to totally rethink your relationship with your inbox. (Iโve seen an early demo, and it is fascinating. It also looks nothing like any email app Iโve ever seen โ and Iโm not sure yet how I feel about that.)
I asked Naveen to share his homescreen with us, to see if there were any other secrets I might be able to learn. Here it is, plus some info on the apps he uses and why:
The phone: iPhone 17 Pro.
The wallpaper: I have a folder on iOS that I save a bunch of nice wallpapers to. It rotates daily โ this one is a rainforest that looks great with the iOS 26 depth effect.
The apps: Camera, Photos, Calendar, Notes, Figma, Slack, Oura, Google Maps, Retro, Tangle, Super Me, Tesla, Phone, Messages, Safari, Extra.
As you know, I test a lot of apps, but a few things to call out:
- I love the Pinterest widget, which I use for motivational quotes for daily inspiration.
- I love to post on Retro at least weekly to keep a photo journal of my year and the most important memories, feels like social done right
- Tangle, a new app by Pinterest cofounder Evan Sharp, allows you to be intentional with your time, taking control of your calendar and setting intentions for things you want to achieve. Itโs helped me plan to be a more intentional parent and plan fun things with my kids.
- SuperMe: Iโm building a startup, and sometimes I have a question about how to do something and want to hear from an expert. Itโs an easy way to ask experts and get human answers versus something like a general LLM, which will give you average answers.
- Extra: my new email app. I quickly know whatโs important in my day, never miss anything important, can easily take action and filter the noise. I can also ask my inbox anything, itโs awesome!
I also asked Naveen to share a few things heโs into right now. Hereโs what he sent back:
- Marcusveltri: I spent way too long watching how awesome he is and how he brings joy to people.
- Doloresaurous: Ran into him the other day walking around the streets as a dinosaur, bringing joy to kids and families.
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.
โIโve been playing the daily games from Spark. Theyโve been great and Iโve been learning things along the way. I love the daily learning habit itโs creating for me.โ โ Carter
โAll about world immersion for me this week. Been reading the first Dungeon Crawler Carl. Super fun and like reading a video game. Accidentally fell down a Kingdom Come Deliverance rabbit hole. Got the new one on sale and decided it was so good that I had to get the first one and play that instead.โ โ Manny
โCome on, itโs the 4K Criterion release of Eyes Wide Shut, obviously!โ โ Naught
โReally considering getting a Viwoods AIPaper Reader. Like a Boox Palma, but Carta 1300, Android 16, etc. Waiting on battery tests though.โ โ Scott
โThe Division 2, the video game. Yes, itโs about seven years old now, but itโs still got a huge user base and the dev team is rolling out new stuff all the time. In like a monthโs time the game is getting a total redesign to add some things the users have been asking for. It should be pretty exciting!โ โ Jack
โThe Great Work, the debut novel from Sheldon Costa, was my most recent fantastic read.โ โ Bill
โHome Assistant because, apparently, home automation is my new hobby and I like the idea of local control. Shouldnโt be too long before Iโve locked myself inside my house.โ โ Lee
โCatching up with Frieren: Beyond Journeyโs End before Season 2 hits. Itโs an anime that starts where most end: the 10-year quest is over and we see where the party members go from there. It might be the show with the most heart airing right now, and itโs beautiful to look at.โ โ Yoinks
โI just started In Stars And Time, a black and white RPG with the best character writing Iโve seen in years. Even the annoying character is adorable by the end of the first hour.โ โ Jordan
I mentioned above that Stranger Things is back this week. Iโm excited! Itโs also been roughly 648 years since the last season debuted. Luckily, YouTube exists, so rather than try to plow through every episode again Iโve been watching a bunch of series recaps. Turns out this is a whole genre of YouTube I didnโt know about! Hereโs the whole series in 24 minutes, and the whole series in 27 minutes, and the whole series also in 24 minutes.
The channel doing this idea the most, at least as far as I can tell, is Man of Recaps, which offers a truly astounding number of single-season and even full-series recaps of shows and movies. (Why youโd want to know everything that happens in Breaking Bad, beginning to end, in 21 minutes is beyond me, but five million views say Iโm the silly one here.) Anyway, as ever, YouTube to the rescue. Now Iโm very ready for season 5.
Have a great holiday, if youโre celebrating, and see you next week!


