vendredi 19 janvier 2024

Vision Pro cover glass repairs will set you back $799 without AppleCare Plus

Vision Pro cover glass repairs will set you back $799 without AppleCare Plus
A woman wears Apple’s Vision Pro headset on a plane to watch the movie “Everything, Everywhere, All at Once.”
Apple’s Vision Pro headset. | Image: Apple

The Apple Vision Pro headset’s sticker price of $3,499 is nothing to sneeze at. But if you choose not to pay the additional $24.99 per month or $499 for two years of AppleCare Plus coverage, be sure to handle your new headset with kid gloves. For users without a coverage plan, repairing a cracked cover glass will cost $799, according to Apple’s updated support page for the Vision Pro.

If you are covered under AppleCare Plus, repairing either a cracked cover glass or other accidental damage will cost $299. At these rates, paying for two years of AppleCare Plus and the reduced cover glass repair fee costs a combined $798 — an entire $1 less than the repair costs without the service plan.

The terms and conditions (pdf) explain the coverage includes any “unexpected and unintentional external event,” including spilling liquid or dropping the device. If you’re unusually clumsy, rest assured that an AppleCare Plus plan covers an “unlimited” number of events during its two-year duration, as long as you come up with the $299 each time.

Screenshot of Apple’s website for cost estimates on Vision Pro repairs showing a potential cost of $2,399. Image: Apple.com
Apple’s Vision Pro service request page

More advanced repairs may be where Apple’s extended coverage is truly required for the Vision Pro. Repairing other damage could cost you up to $2,399 — more than two-thirds the cost of a brand-new Vision Pro, while the extended coverage is in place even if the damage requires replacing the device. Apple wasn’t specific about what level of harm could require a full replacement, but your local fix-it place probably doesn’t have a 23 million pixel Micro-OLED display lying around in the back.

The increased availability of DIY and third-party repair services have sometimes provided a cheaper alternative to Apple’s official avenues for repairs of other devices. Last year, as right-to-repair laws passed in states like a number of U.S. states like California, Minnesota, and New York, Apple committed to making parts, tools, and information available for DIY repairs of its devices.

After the iPhone 15 launched last fall, Apple expanded its self-service repair offerings to cover the new phones about a month later, and if it follows that for the Vision Pro, then DIY and third-party repairs may be another option to take care of anything that breaks. But for now, Vision Pro buyers can consider tacking the cost of AppleCare Plus onto an already high price — and be extra careful roaming around in their new eyewear.

Microsoft Executives’ Emails Hacked by Group Tied to Russian Intelligence

Microsoft Executives’ Emails Hacked by Group Tied to Russian Intelligence The hackers appeared to be trying to learn what the company knew about them, a regulatory filing said.

Microsoft ‘senior leadership’ emails accessed by Russian SolarWinds hackers

Microsoft ‘senior leadership’ emails accessed by Russian SolarWinds hackers
Illustration of the Microsoft wordmark on a green background
Illustration: The Verge

Microsoft is revealing today that it has discovered a nation-state attack on its corporate systems from the same Russian state-sponsored group of hackers that were responsible for the sophisticated SolarWinds attack. Microsoft says the hackers, known as Nobelium, were able to access email accounts of some members of its senior leadership team late last year.

“Beginning in late November 2023, the threat actor used a password spray attack to compromise a legacy non-production test tenant account and gain a foothold, and then used the account’s permissions to access a very small percentage of Microsoft corporate email accounts, including members of our senior leadership team and employees in our cybersecurity, legal, and other functions, and exfiltrated some emails and attached documents,” says the Microsoft Security Response Center in a blog post filed late on Friday.

Microsoft says the group was “initially targeting email accounts” for information about themselves, but it’s not clear what other emails and documents have been stolen in the process. Microsoft only discovered the attack last week on January 12th, and the company hasn’t disclosed how long the attackers were able to access its systems.

“The attack was not the result of a vulnerability in Microsoft products or services. To date, there is no evidence that the threat actor had any access to customer environments, production systems, source code, or AI systems,” says Microsoft.

The attack took place just days after Microsoft announced its plan to overhaul its software security following major Azure cloud attacks. While Microsoft customers don’t appear to have been impacted in this new incident and this wasn’t the result of a Microsoft vulnerability, this is still the latest in a line of cybersecurity incidents for Microsoft. It found itself at the center of the SolarWinds attack nearly three years ago, then 30,000 organizations’ email servers were hacked in 2021 due to a Microsoft Exchange Server flaw, and Chinese hackers breached US government emails via a Microsoft cloud exploit last year.

Microsoft is now changing the way it designs, builds, tests, and operates its software and services. It’s the biggest change to its security approach since the company announced its Security Development Lifecycle (SDL) in 2004 after huge Windows XP flaws knocked PCs offline.

jeudi 18 janvier 2024

You won’t be able to use the YouTube app on Vision Pro

You won’t be able to use the YouTube app on Vision Pro
The Apple Vision Pro
Nilay Patel

Just like Netflix, YouTube also isn’t building a native app for the Vision Pro. Its iPad app won’t support the $3,499 headset, either, as YouTube spokesperson Jessica Gibby tells The Verge, “YouTube users will be able to use YouTube in Safari on the Vision Pro.”

Those aren’t the only major services that won’t have dedicated apps on the Vision Pro. A source familiar with the situation tells Bloomberg that Spotify isn’t planning to create a new app for the Vision Pro and “doesn’t expect to enable its iPad app to run on the device,” potentially forcing users to access Spotify in a web browser.

Spotify spokesperson Grey Munford tells The Verge that the company can’t confirm this report and that Spotify has “made no announcement concerning plans for the Vision Pro.”

Out of the 46 most popular apps on the App Store, none of them will have a native visionOS app at launch, according to findings from MacStories. This list could always change — and some of the apps will still offer Vision Pro support through their existing apps on iPhone and iPad — but the lack of native apps just weeks away from the Vision Pro launch isn’t particularly encouraging.

The Verge reached out to Google and Spotify with a request for comment but didn’t immediately hear back.

The Apple Vision Pro will launch with 3D movies from Disney Plus as well as support for several other streaming apps, like Amazon Prime Video, Max, Paramount Plus, Pluto TV, Peacock, and others. While Spotify doesn’t seem like a massive omission from a mixed-reality headset, the absence of dedicated Netflix and YouTube apps could certainly make the device less attractive for users who are expecting to use the headset as their own immersive media player.

Update January 18th, 6:06PM ET: Added a comment from Spotify.

The Rabbit R1 will receive live info from Perplexity’s AI ‘answer engine’

The Rabbit R1 will receive live info from Perplexity’s AI ‘answer engine’
Rabbit

CES 2024 darling Rabbit has announced a partnership with Perplexity that will link the “conversational AI-powered answer engine” to the R1, a $199 Teenage Engineering-designed AI gadget that’s already sold through 50,000 preorders. Unlike LLMs that can only reference data up to a certain date in the past, what they’re pitching for the R1 is a built-in search engine with “live up to date answers without any knowledge cutoff.”

According to Perplexity co-founder Aravind Srinivas, who announced the deal in a live Spaces broadcast with Rabbit CEO Jesse Lyu, the first 100,000 Rabbit R1 purchases will also come with one year of its Perplexity Pro subscription. The plan includes access to newer LLMs like GPT-4 and normally costs $20 per month.

In a post on X, Rabbit said that Perplexity will work behind the scenes on its device “along with other leading LLMs” that are so far unnamed, all without a subscription.

Featuring a 2.88-inch touchscreen, scrolling navigation wheel, and a rotating camera, the R1 is pitched as a pocket-sized universal controller for your various apps, capable of everything from sending messages to selecting songs to making online orders thanks to “Large Action Model” AI.

Perplexity AI, meanwhile, combines search with LLMs like OpenAI’s GPT-3.5 to face off with Google, Bing, and all of the other new AI-powered challengers.

mercredi 17 janvier 2024

EA is finally launching Plants vs. Zombies 3

EA is finally launching Plants vs. Zombies 3
A screenshot of Plants vs. Zombies 3
Image: EA

It’s been almost five years since EA announced the third installment of the popular Plants vs. Zombie mobile game, and now it’s nearly here. EA has revealed that Plants vs. Zombies 3: Welcome to Zomburbia (PvZ3) has soft-launched in select countries, including the UK, Netherlands, Australia, Philippines, and Ireland.

Just like previous installments, PvZ3 is a tower defense game that tasks you with using animated plants to fend off a horde of zombies. EA says the game features “new and returning characters,” along with gameplay that reflects the “classic combat of the first game.” PvZ3 will be free to play, but it will still have microtransactions.

The original Plants vs. Zombies was released on PC and Mac in 2009 before making its way to mobile devices. The game expanded to even more platforms following the acquisition of its developer — PopCap Games — by EA in 2011. It also led to the development of Plants vs. Zombies 2, which came out in 2013. That’s also around the same time the game switched from costing a flat $2.99 fee to becoming free to play.

EA says PvZ3 will become available in more countries “at a later date” while it collects feedback during the soft launch period.

Netflix’s app won’t work on the Vision Pro

Netflix’s app won’t work on the Vision Pro
Apple Vision Pro headset on a stand photographed from a low angle.
Photo by Vjeran Pavic / The Verge

Apple’s Vision Pro headset won’t have a dedicated Netflix app at launch, according to a report from Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman. The streaming giant reportedly doesn’t plan to launch an app specifically for Apple’s headset, nor does it want to make its iPad app compatible with the platform.

The move means users won’t be able to watch Netflix in a dedicated app — like the other streaming services that have announced support for the headset, including Disney Plus, Max, Amazon Prime Video, and Paramount Plus. Instead, users will have to watch content from Netflix in a web browser, which will make the movies or TV shows wearers are watching far less immersive. It also will prevent users from watching content offline and could put limitations on resolution, as the video quality on Netflix’s web app varies by browser.

“Our members will be able to enjoy Netflix on the web browser on the Vision Pro, similar to how our members can enjoy Netflix on Macs,” Netflix said in a statement to Bloomberg. Neither Netflix nor Apple immediately responded to The Verge’s request for comment. While Netflix ended up creating an app for Meta’s lineup of Quest headsets, the app is pretty outdated.

Netflix was notably not mentioned in Apple’s announcement yesterday that the Vision Pro will launch with 3D movies and experiences from Disney Plus and Apple TV. Netflix’s absence from the $3,499 headset might make the device less enticing for those who want to use it as a place to stream their favorite shows and movies.

Where to preorder Samsung’s new Galaxy S24, S24 Plus, and S24 Ultra

Where to preorder Samsung’s new Galaxy S24, S24 Plus, and S24 Ultra
Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra shown in four color options, standing upright with rear panel facing out.
The Galaxy S24 family arrives with new AI features to enhance photography, communication, and search. Here’s where you can preorder one. | Photo by Allison Johnson / The Verge

Following a spat of leaks, Samsung has unveiled its forthcoming set of flagship phones, detailing the new Galaxy S24, S24 Plus, and S24 Ultra at its latest Unpacked event. The new smartphones officially launch on January 31st and are available for preorder beginning today, with the base model starting at $799.99, the Plus model starting at $999.99, and the high-end Ultra handset going for $1,299.99.

In our early hands-on time with them, we haven’t noticed anything groundbreaking about the Galaxy S24 family’s hardware, though each phone boasts a slightly bigger battery and display than its predecessor. The Ultra now further justifies its premium price tag with a titanium build, and all of the displays are noticeably brighter. Instead of reinventing the design wheel, Samsung has instead focused on building out a suite of AI features that rely on Google’s Gemini foundational models, many of which sound genuinely helpful, while others are meant purely for fun.

Some of these features are fully processed on the new Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chipset, while others require server-side processing. These phones should also age much more gracefully, as Samsung generously matches Google’s seven-year upgrade promise, guaranteeing you at least seven major Android upgrades and security updates.

For now, you’re probably wondering where you can order one ahead of their official launch later this month. Thankfully, you’ll find nice preorder incentives no matter which carrier or retailer you prefer.

Samsung Galaxy S24 preorders and offers

The Galaxy S24 starts at $799.99 for the 8GB RAM model with 128GB of storage. Higher storage tiers will cost more, but Samsung has encored its free storage upgrade promotion this year that’ll get you double the storage on all models — including a bump from 512GB to 1TB on the Ultra, which is a first. It’s widely available in black, gray, violet, and yellow, though Samsung also offers it in green, blue, and orange if you purchase it direct.

In addition to the aforementioned storage upgrade, Samsung is throwing in a $25 credit if you purchase one during the preorder window as well as up to $550 in trade credit. Best Buy, meanwhile, is currently offering a $50 gift card and up to $870 after qualifying trade-ins and factoring in the price difference for the free storage upgrade. Amazon is offering a free storage upgrade and a $50 gift card as well, but you’ll need to click the on-page coupon to redeem it.

When compared to the Ultra, the standard Galaxy S24 lacks the titanium build and S Pen, along with the 200-megapixel wide and 5x telephoto cameras, QHD resolution, and 45W charging. It’s the smallest of the three phones at 6.2 inches, but that’s a boon for those who prefer petiteness, and it should sufficiently satisfy most buyers’ needs outside of the most demanding creatives and power users.

Samsung Galaxy S24 Plus preorders and offers

Starting at $999.99, the Galaxy S24 Plus offers 12GB of RAM and either 256GB or 512GB of storage. You’ll also get a free bump to the larger storage model if you buy it from Samsung during the preorder period. Trading in your older phone nets you up to $650 toward your purchase, and you’ll get an additional $75 in instant credit.

As for other retailers, the same storage promo is currently available at Best Buy with a $100 gift card and any additional funds you’d get from trading in your old device. It’s the same deal at Amazon, but you’ll receive a $150 gift card instead of a $100 gift card when you redeem the on-page coupon.

The Galaxy S24 Plus is similar to the base model but has a bigger 6.7-inch screen with QHD-equivalent resolution (an upgrade over the standard S24 and last year’s S23 Plus). This is the pick for you if you value more screen real estate and a substantially larger battery.

Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra preorders and offers

The Galaxy S24 Ultra now starts at $1,299.99 for the 12GB RAM model with 256GB of storage, which is a $100 uptick from last year’s model. A free storage upgrade to 512GB offsets the added cost, which you can get by preordering the phone through Samsung. This year, those who opt for the 512GB model will also get a free storage upgrade to the 1TB configuration. You can also get up to $750 with a trade-in, and you’ll get a $100 instant credit that’s good toward additional purchases made at the time of sale.

As for Best Buy, you’ll get up to $870 in value after trade-ins and free storage upgrades up to 512GB, along with a $150 gift card. Amazon is offering a free storage upgrade as well, along with a $200 gift card when you redeem the on-page coupon.

The S24 Ultra enjoys more radical changes this year. It’s only slightly bigger than the S24 Plus at 6.8 inches, but it includes an integrated S Pen, a new 50-megapixel 5x telephoto camera, and a 200MP wide-angle camera that serves as the primary shooter. It’s also the only smartphone of the three that sports a titanium frame and Corning’s new Gorilla Armor, the strongest tempered glass the company makes. The S24 Ultra is currently available in gray, black, violet, and yellow, with Samsung.com offering it exclusively in blue, green, and orange.

Galaxy S24 offers at US carriers

  • Verizon will trade any older Samsung phone you have in any condition for a Galaxy S24 or S24 Plus or, for $1,000 off, a Galaxy S24 Ultra. Those discounts are administered as bill credits over a 36-month period. Verizon is also offering the same free storage upgrade as Samsung, Best Buy, and other retailers. You can also add a free Galaxy Watch and Galaxy Tab as additional lines or save up to 50 percent on a pair of Galaxy Buds 2 Pro, 25 percent on select chargers, and 15 percent on cases and screen protectors.
  • AT&T is also offering a Galaxy S24 and S24 Plus or $1,000 off the S24 Ultra as monthly bill credits when you trade in a Galaxy phone in any condition. Like the other retailers, you’ll also receive a free storage upgrade if you place your preorder before January 31st.
  • T-Mobile customers can get the Galaxy S24 and S24 Plus for free and up to $1,000 off the Galaxy S24 Ultra (distributed as 24 equal bill credits) when trading in phones on a Go5G Plus or Go5G Next plan. You can also get the base Galaxy S24 for free (up to $800 off) without a trade-in if you’re adding a new line to either of those plans. If you make your purchase during the preorder period, you’ll get double the storage for free. New and existing customers can also get a $200 prepaid Mastercard for each new line they add (which is good for up to five lines).

Related:

Apple Expected to Remove a Health Feature From New Apple Watches

Apple Expected to Remove a Health Feature From New Apple Watches The Apple Watch Series 9 and Watch Ultra 2 would no longer detect people’s pulse rate, to comply with a ruling by the International Trade Commission.

 How to watch Samsung’s Galaxy S24 event

 How to watch Samsung’s Galaxy S24 event
Samsung promoting Unpacked at The Sphere. | Image: Samsung

It’s almost time for Samsung’s winter Unpacked event, where we’ll see the launch of the Galaxy S24 lineup and some splashy new AI features to go along with them. The event will cap off months of leaks of the new devices — plus some teases directly from Samsung itself.

Just before Thanksgiving last year, Samsung announced a new mobile AI experience it’s calling Galaxy AI, which it said was scheduled to debut in early 2024. We should get the lowdown on Galaxy AI at this year’s event. The company is also rumored to be partnering with Google on some AI features, too.

We’ve rounded up everything else you need to know about this year’s Unpacked below:

When is Samsung Galaxy Unpacked?

Samsung will hold Galaxy Unpacked on January 17th, 2024, at 1PM ET or 10AM PT. It will take place in San Jose, California.

Where can I watch Galaxy Unpacked?

You have your pick of watching the livestream directly on Samsung’s site or catching it on Samsung’s YouTube channel. Or you can simply check out the livestream that’s embedded at the top of this article.

What devices can I expect at Galaxy Unpacked?

Samsung will announce the next generation of its flagship smartphones: the Galaxy S24, S24 Plus, and S24 Ultra. The biggest changes are expected to arrive at the top of the line. According to leaked images from GSMArena and other outlets, the S24 Ultra will feature a flat screen, pivoting away from the curved design of S23 Ultra. It’s also rumored to switch to a titanium shell, like the iPhone 15 Pro.

As other leaks have noted, the inner workings of the S24 Ultra aren’t expected to be all that different from its predecessor. It also features a 6.8-inch Quad-HD screen, 120Hz refresh rate, similar storage options, 12GB of RAM, and a 5,000mAh battery. But we’ll see a new and improved 50MP 5x telephoto camera, better vapor chamber cooling to ensure your phone doesn’t heat up, and Wi-fi 7.

The S24 and S24 Plus are likely to retain an aluminum build. Hardware upgrades are also more modest, with the Plus getting a slightly larger and higher resolution 6.7-inch QHD Plus display along with more RAM and a larger battery, Android Police reported.

What’s all the fuss about Galaxy AI?

Samsung will certainly roll the red carpet out for its new AI experience. We already know that Galaxy AI will include a live translation feature for calls, with both audio and text translations appearing instantaneously as you speak. An AI photo editor is also on the way, according to recent leaks.

mardi 16 janvier 2024

Apple’s App Store policies now let US developers link to outside payments

Apple’s App Store policies now let US developers link to outside payments
An illustration of the Apple logo.
Illustration: The Verge

Apple has updated its App Store policies to spell out how developers can link to outside payment platforms, as reported by 9to5Mac. Developers will still owe Apple a cut if they use an outside payment platform. Apple will take a 27 percent cut (as opposed to the 30 percent in many cases) or 12 percent if a developer is part of the App Store Small Business Program, according to a support page about external purchase links.

Section 3.1.1(a) of the App Store Review Guidelines lays down more of the new rules for developers who want to link to alternative payment methods, like how they have to apply for an “entitlement” to enable them. Developers also can’t exclusively receive payments from outside Apple’s walled garden; they’ll also have to offer Apple’s in-app purchase system in their apps.

Three simulated iPhone screenshots showing how an app could link to “www.example.com” to allow payments outside the App Store. Image: Apple
Apple’s template examples for in-app links to outside payment options.

The updates follow the Supreme Court’s decision not to hear Apple and Epic’s appeals over the Epic Games v. Apple ruling, which required Apple to discontinue its anti-steering rules.

Tim Sweeney, Epic’s founder and CEO, isn’t pleased with Apple’s updates to its policies. He calls the 27 percent fee “anticompetitive,” criticizes Apple’s rules for how the links appear and how they work, and highlighted what he calls the “scare screen” that users will see when they leave an app to go to an external site.

He says that Epic “will contest Apple’s bad-faith compliance plan in District Court.” I’ve replied to Sweeney and emailed Epic’s PR team to try and clarify what that means.

Update January 16th, 7:25PM ET: Added tweet from Tim Sweeney.

Samsung’s Galaxy S24 preorder still comes with a $50 credit — for one more day

Samsung’s Galaxy S24 preorder still comes with a $50 credit — for one more day
Samsung’s logo set in the middle of red, black, white, and yellow ovals.
The Galaxy S24 is likely launching tomorrow, and you still have time to already secure a decent bonus for pre-ordering one. | Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

Samsung is expected to announce the Galaxy S24 series tomorrow, January 17th. If you’ve caught up on our coverage of all the rumored changes and know you’ll be upgrading upon release, you might as well reserve one. There’s no payment due today for doing so, and you’ll be rewarded with a $50 credit that’s usable toward other devices or accessories at the time of purchase.

Today is your last chance to take advantage of this deal, and there are no guarantees that we’ll see any other Galaxy S24 preorder incentives outside of Samsung’s traditional trade-in offers. You’ll only need to provide your name and email address to receive a unique link to place your order after the event.

Samsung will also offer separate instant credits worth $25, $75, or $100, depending on the exact model you buy. While you can’t use the reserve or the additional credit toward the cost of the device itself, you can combine the values from both offers to significantly lower the price tag on a new Galaxy Watch or a pair of Galaxy Buds, for example.

From the leaked rumors, it sounds like the Galaxy S24 might be another routine revision on the hardware front, but Samsung is teasing AI as a big central focus this year. Previous reports suggest the company is looking to bake in a new generative AI. You’ll have to tune into the event stream tomorrow for word on that and other new tricks in store.

Whether you have children to run after or your side hustles have side hustles, adult life can be maddeningly busy, and spending time cleaning is the last thing most of us want to do. If you’re not economically equipped to pay for a cleaning service, you can buy back your time and save loads of money with the Roomba Combo j7 Plus. The Combo j7 Plus debuted at $1,099 just over a year ago, and it’s sustained a discounted $699 price tag ($300 off) since Black Friday. You can find that deal at Amazon, Best Buy, Target, Roomba, and Wellbots.

This robot vacuum takes two chores off your plate by combining automatic vacuuming and mopping with iRobot’s tried and tested room-mapping smarts. Like most Roombas, the j7 Plus learns your home’s layout over time, and it’s one of the most reliable vacuums you can buy in terms of coverage thoroughness and object avoidance. Jennifer Pattison Tuohy, who reviewed the Roomba Combo j7 Plus for The Verge, says it didn’t need constant reorienting in her tests and will even remember individual rooms and skip them on command. Like most Roombas, it’s mostly hands-off in that it cleans your floors and returns to its home base for charging and emptying on an automated schedule. However, you’ll need to step in between each mopping job to manually refill its small water tank.

Read our iRobot Roomba Combo j7 Plus review.

Other great deals to check out

  • Need a new gaming headset for your Xbox Series X or Series S? Check out the SteelSeries Arctis 9X wireless headset in black, which is available at Best Buy for $149.99, down from $199.99 ($50 off). You’ll get an additional $50 discount as a My Best Buy Plus or Total member, for a total of 50 percent off. SteelSeries headsets are some of the best out there, offering balanced game audio and great comfort thanks to its adjustable ski-goggle headband design. This midrange version is made specifically for Xbox with wireless pairing directly to your console, no dongles needed. You can also use it with any Bluetooth device.
  • Apple AirTags are great for tracking down your belongings, but not everyone owns an iPhone. If you’re one of those who favor Samsung devices, you’ll want Samsung’s SmartTag 2, now just $21.99 in black and white after a 27 percent discount at Amazon (about $8 off). If you need multiples, you’ll find a better deal with this four-pack that includes two of each color for $70 ($30 off). SmartTag 2 uses ultra-wideband technology, similar to AirTags, for precise AR tracking with a compass when you’re within 10 meters of the device. That feature only works on supported Samsung devices with Android 11 or later. Otherwise, you can get periodic location updates on any Samsung smartphone with Android 8.0 or higher.
  • The DJI Osmo Pocket 3 might be the toast of the town for vlogging cameras right now, but if you don’t have $500 to spend on that, the DJI Pocket 2 still holds its own with a 1 / 1.7-inch sensor that captures great color and clarity. Now down to $279 ($70 off) at Amazon, Best Buy, and DJI, this pocketable recording tool is beginner friendly and has an integrated gimbal with ActiveTrack to keep your shots extremely stable and your face centered in the frame. I’ve personally graduated to the latest Pocket 3, but I’d still happily pick up the second-generation model if my budget called for something more affordable.
  • At $104.99 (about $75 off) at Amazon for the 64GB model with lock screen ads, we’ve never seen the latest Amazon Fire HD 10 tablet this affordable. It’s $15 cheaper than the previously recorded all-time low. You can remove those ads later by paying Amazon a nominal fee, or you can rid yourself of them by buying the version without ads outright for $119.99, also $75 off from its original $194.99 price. You can buy them in black, lilac, or ocean colors. It’s no iPad, but this is a serviceable starter tablet for the money.

Substack’s moderation battle: all the latest news

Substack’s moderation battle: all the latest news
An illustration of the Substack logo.
Illustration by The Verge

The publishing platform’s response to Nazi content is driving away some well-known writers.

Since launching in 2017, Substack has emerged as a publishing platform for writers looking to monetize their work through paid newsletters. However, as the platform has grown, so has its content. In November 2023, a report from The Atlantic revealed that while Substack’s approach to content moderation banned pornography and spam, it allowed Nazi-supporting and white supremacist newsletters on the platform, including some with paying subscribers that generated commissions for Substack.

These findings led more than 200 Substack authors to sign an open letter asking why the platform is letting those newsletters publish and monetize that kind of content.

Substack co-founder Hamish McKenzie wrote a response saying it wouldn’t remove or demonetize Nazi content. But after Platformer founder Casey Newton raised questions about Substack’s approach to content moderation, it ended up taking down five Nazi newsletters, all while refusing to make any changes to its policies.

Here’s the story so far.

Adobe’s new AI-powered Premiere Pro features eradicate boring audio editing tasks

Adobe’s new AI-powered Premiere Pro features eradicate boring audio editing tasks
A screenshot taken of the Adobe Premiere Pro beta editing timeline with new track effects applied.
These new Premiere Pro beta features aim to speed up audio editing tasks so users can focus on other creative projects. | Image: Adobe

Adobe is introducing new AI-powered audio editing features to Premiere Pro that aim to remove some of the tedious legwork required to complete editing tasks — such as manually locating specific tools, or cleaning up poor-quality dialogue. New workflows will be available in the Premiere Pro public beta starting today, including interactive fade handles that enable users to quickly create custom audio transitions by dragging them directly across their main editing timeline. The Enhanced Speech beta feature will also become generally available to all Premiere Pro users in the coming weeks.

Other updates to the Premiere Pro beta include AI-powered audio category tagging that automatically identifies and labels clips as dialogue, music, sound effects, or ambient noise, which will now also feature an interactive badge that’s designed to reduce the “mouse mileage” needed to find specific editing tools. Clicking the assigned category badge will open the Essential Sound panel, which provides easy one-click access to the most common tools used to edit that particular type of audio clip. Clip badges have also been redesigned to make audio effects quicker to apply, and make clips with effects already applied easier to identify from the timeline.

A screenshot of the Premiere Pro beta’s new interactive fade handles. Image: Adobe
New interactive fade handles in the Premiere Pro beta allow editors to make quick audio transitions by simply dragging them across clips.

Additional quality-of-life improvements being added to the Premiere Pro beta include having waveforms (the graphical representation of sound patterns) automatically resize when track height is adjusted in the editing timeline, and updated colors for clips that make them easier to see. These should grant editors more control over how their timeline can be visually customized to achieve a layout that best complements their personal workflow.

The Premiere Pro beta is a standalone application that’s available to anyone with a Creative Cloud subscription for the main Premiere Pro app. Users can install it from the Beta apps tab of the Creative Cloud desktop launcher, and both versions can co-exist on the same system, allowing creatives to tinker with experimental features before they’re available in the main Premiere Pro app.

A screenshot taken of the updated clip badges in Premiere Pro that make it easier to apply audio effects from the timeline. Image: Adobe
The updated FX badges in the Premiere Pro beta provide a quick way to apply new audio effects to clips on your editing timeline.

For example, Enhanced Speech — a feature that automatically cleans up badly recorded dialogue by removing unwanted background noise and improving overall clarity — will soon be generally available for all Premiere Pro users sometime in February, though Adobe hasn’t specified an exact date. The feature was first introduced to the Premiere Pro beta in September 2023, where it’s still available to try out ahead of its incoming full release.

These updates aren’t intended to automate audio editing entirely, but to optimize the existing process so that editors have more time to work on other projects. “As Premiere Pro becomes the first choice for more and more professional editors, we’re seeing editors being asked to do a lot more than just cut picture. At some level, most editors have to do some amount of color work, of audio work, even titling and basic effects,” said Paul Saccone, senior director for Adobe Pro Video, to The Verge.

“Sure, there are still specialists you can hand off to depending on the project size, but the more we can enable customers to make this sort of work easier and more intuitive inside Premiere Pro, the more successful they’re going to be in their other creative endeavors.”

Apple tops Samsung for first time in global smartphone shipments

Apple tops Samsung for first time in global smartphone shipments
Apple iPhone 15 and 15 Plus standing up in front of a small plant on a wood table.
Apple’s latest iPhone 15 and 15 Plus. | Photo by Dan Seifert / The Verge

For the first time ever, Apple beat out Samsung to ship the most smartphones in a year according to IDC’s Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker. Although IDC cautions that its data is preliminary and subject to change, a second research agency, Canalys, also has Apple taking its top spot for all of 2023. IDC has Apple’s total mobile shipments at 234.6 million, versus 226.6 million for Samsung. Xiaomi, Oppo, and Transsion round out the top five with 145.9, 103.1 and 94.9 million smartphones shipped, respectively.

IDC notes that the last time Samsung wasn’t on top of the annual board was 13 years ago in 2010. Back then Apple didn’t even feature in the top five. Instead it was Nokia in first place, Samsung in second, LG Electronics in third, ZTE in fourth, and Research in Motion (manufacturers of BlackBerry devices) in fifth. If you needed any evidence that 13 years is a long time in the smartphone industry, then this list of companies would be it.

“Not only is Apple the only player in the Top 3 to show positive growth annually, but also bags the number 1 spot annually for the first time ever,” said IDC’s Worldwide Tracker team research director Nabila Popal. “Apple’s ongoing success and resilience is in large part due to the increasing trend of premium devices, which now represent over 20% of the market, fueled by aggressive trade-in offers and interest-free financing plans.”

Although IDC notes that Apple played a key part in knocking Samsung off the top spot, the company also saw intense competition from other Android manufacturers like Huawei, OnePlus, Honor, and Google. It’s not just Samsung that is being challenged by these companies, Canalys notes that Huawei’s “improving strength” could also be a problem for Apple’s growth in the Chinese market. Last year reports emerged that Huawei had managed to overcome US sanctions and build an advanced 7nm processor from Chinese chipmaker Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC) into its Mate 60 Pro smartphone capable of 5G speeds.

While overall smartphone shipments declined 3.2 percent in 2023 versus 2022, there are signs that the market might be recovering from its recent slump. IDC reports that shipments grew 8.5 percent year-on-year in the fourth quarter, while Canalys has it growing 8 percent after seven straight quarters of declines.

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Here’s OpenAI’s big plan to combat election misinformation

Here’s OpenAI’s big plan to combat election misinformation
Illustration of the OpenAI logo on an orange background with purple lines
Illustration: The Verge

Yesterday TikTok presented me with what appeared to be a deepfake of Timothee Chalamet sitting in Leonardo Dicaprio’s lap and yes, I did immediately think “if this stupid video is that good imagine how bad the election misinformation will be.” OpenAI has, by necessity, been thinking about the same thing and today updated its policies to begin to address the issue.

The Wall Street Journal noted the new change in policy which were first published to OpenAI’s blog. ChatGPT, Dall-e, and other OpenAI tool users and makers are now forbidden from using OpenAI’s tools to impersonate candidates or local governments and users cannot use OpenAI’s tools for campaigns or lobbying either. Users are also not permitted to use OpenAI tools to discourage voting or misrepresent the voting process.

In addition to being firmer in its policies on election misinformation OpenAI also plans to incorporate the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity’s (C2PA) digital credentials into images generated by Dall-E “early this year”. Currently Microsoft, Amazon, Adobe, and Getty are also working with C2PA to combat misinformation through AI image generation.

The digital credential system would encode images with their provenance, effectively making it much easier to identify artificially generated image without having to look for weird hands or exceptionally swag fits.

OpenAI’s tools will also begin directing voting questions in the United States to CanIVote.org, which tends to be one of the best authorities on the internet for where and how to vote in the U.S.

But all these tools are currently only in the process of being rolled out, and heavily dependent on users reporting bad actors. Given that AI is itself a rapidly changing tool that regularly surprises us with wonderful poetry and outright lies it’s not clear how well this will work to combat misinformation in the election season. For now your best bet will continue to be embracing media literacy. That means questioning every piece of news or image that seems too good to be true and at least doing a quick Google search if your ChatGPT one turns up something utterly wild.

Microsoft’s new Copilot Pro brings AI-powered Office features to the rest of us

Microsoft’s new Copilot Pro brings AI-powered Office features to the rest of us
Illustration of Microsoft’s AI Copilot
Image: Microsoft

Microsoft first launched its AI-powered Office features for businesses in November, but just two months later the company is already offering them to consumers. Copilot Pro is launching today as a $20 monthly subscription that provides access to AI-powered features inside Office apps like Word, Excel, and PowerPoint alongside priority access to the latest OpenAI models and the ability to build your own Copilot GPT.

If you’re already a Microsoft 365 Personal or Home subscriber then the extra $20 per month (per person) subscription will immediately unlock Copilot in Office apps on Mac, Windows, and iPad. These features include the ability to generate entire PowerPoint slide decks from a chatbot-like prompt, and inline Copilot experiences in Word to rephrase paragraphs, generate text, and summarize documents. Copilot will also appear in Outlook.com to help you reply to emails or generate new ones, and a preview version is available in Excel to analyze data, generate graphs, and much more.

Most of the features that have been available to businesses for the past couple of months will be available to consumers, with the big exception of being able to summon Copilot to generate a PowerPoint deck based on a Word document. Because the consumer version isn’t powered by Microsoft’s Graph technology, this functionality isn’t available just yet.

Beyond Office integration, Copilot Pro also includes access to the latest OpenAI models, improvements to the Image Creator from Designer (formerly Bing Image Creator), and the ability to build your own Copilot GPT.

If you’re not a Microsoft 365 subscriber then you could subscribe to just Copilot Pro to get priority access to GPT-4 Turbo inside Copilot. You’ll get faster performance during peak times and the ability to toggle between models soon. Image creation using OpenAI’s DALL-E models will also be improved with a new landscape image format and improved image quality with Copilot Pro. The subscription will also soon include a new Copilot GPT Builder that lets you create a custom Copilot GPT — similar to the version launched for businesses last year.

 Image: Microsoft
Copilot Pro enables AI-powered features in a bunch of Office apps.

Microsoft is aiming this new Copilot Pro subscription at its Copilot power users, in much the same way that OpenAI offers its own subscription to ChatGPT with priority access and the latest models. “There’s a lot of demand from those power users and they want more rapid access to the latest models, they want faster performance, and they want creativity tools,” says Divya Kumar, global head of marketing for search and AI at Microsoft, in a discussion with The Verge.

These Copilot Pro features are likely tempting for power users, but you will need to also subscribe to Microsoft 365 Personal or Family to get any of the Office-related Copilot features across the web and in Office apps. All of these Copilot Pro features will also be available on the web, in Windows or Mac apps, and on mobile. There are also more Copilot Pro features on the way, much like how Microsoft has been continually improving Copilot (formerly Bing Chat) over the past year.

“Given that pattern we’ve been in, that rolling thunder, you can expect we’re going to do the exact same thing for Copilot Pro,” says Kumar using a metaphor for the AI bombardment we’ve seen from Microsoft in recent months. “It’s already coming in with a lot of features and functionality on top of Copilot... we want to continue to bring an additional premium value and we’re going to very quickly start to do that as well.”

Microsoft is also opening up its Copilot for Microsoft 365 offering to more businesses today. This launched with a 300-seat minimum for larger enterprise users last year, but Microsoft is removing that limitation and letting most of its business customers sign up for a $30 per user, per month subscription today. You can read more about that right here.

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These are the certified Wi-Fi 7 devices you can buy now

These are the certified Wi-Fi 7 devices you can buy now
Stylized image with pink and blue lighting of several gamers at a table. All are using Razer Blade laptops with large desk mats plugged into them. The desk mats have RGB edge lighting and are wirelessly powering the gaming mice.
Razer’s newest gaming laptops are certified for Wi-Fi 7. | Image: Razer

The Wi-Fi Alliance announced at the beginning of CES last week that it had begun certifying Wi-Fi 7 devices. Not having the certification doesn’t mean a device won’t work, but it does mean that it’s been confirmed to work within the standard’s specification and is therefore compatible with other Wi-Fi devices. Handily, the Wi-Fi Alliance has a searchable database of what’s certified, and a few notable ones have already earned the Alliance’s stamp of approval for the new standard.

You may already have a Wi-Fi 7 smartphone if you own the Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra. Qualcomm’s FastConnect 7800 network adapter, which is now certified for the new Wi-Fi standard, is included with Samsung’s 2023 flagship phone. The only trouble is, to date, Samsung hasn’t enabled the feature. It would be a significant upgrade if it did, though, even if it only gets half of the 5.8Gbps throughput that Qualcomm claims on its site (given a Wi-Fi 7 router and a fast enough internet connection, that is).

If you plan to buy a laptop this year, chances are good you’ll end up with a certified Wi-Fi 7 Wi-Fi chipset in that, too. That’s because of the Intel BE200 card that’s in laptops that were announced at CES, like the new Razer Blade 16. It will also show up in others as the year wears on. Intel claims up to 5,800Gbps throughput on the 6GHz band with the BE800, just like Qualcomm’s smartphone chip.

Of the several Wi-Fi 7 routers on the market now, TP-Link’s Deco BE85 mesh router and Archer BE800 are the only consumer-grade Wi-Fi 7 routers for sale that now appear on the Alliance’s list. The Archer BE800 is a tri-band router with dual 10Gbps ports and two 2.5Gbps ports. It’s also compatible with Wi-Fi EasyMesh, a brand-agnostic Wi-Fi mesh standard that should mean it works with any other EasyMesh router. The Deco BE85 is a dedicated mesh router that only uses TP-Link’s proprietary mesh technology. You’ll pay for either router, though — a two-pack of Decos is $999.99 while the Archer sells for $599.99.

Vision Pro demos will include scanning your glasses to identify your prescription

Vision Pro demos will include scanning your glasses to identify your prescription
The Apple Vision Pro headset on display at Apple’s headquarters in Cupertino.
Photo by Vjeran Pavic / The Verge

For anyone who wants to try the Apple Vision Pro when it’s officially released on February 2nd, there’s going to be a whole procedure. We knew that, but now a report in Mark Gurman’s latest Power On newsletter for Bloomberg sheds light on how the in-store demos for the Vision Pro will work.

According to Gurman, the process will start with an Apple Store employee scanning users’ faces to pick out the light seal for Apple’s headset — a process he likens to configuring Face ID. For those who need vision correction, Apple will reportedly also scan their lenses with a special device to suss out the prescription. Then an employee fits a Vision Pro with one of “hundreds” of on-hand lenses and a seal and tells you how to use the device (including, apparently, how to hold it).

The demo that follows, Gurman says, will last for up to 25 minutes. It will reportedly involve viewing photos and videos (including the 3D “spatial” kind that you can take with the iPhone 15 Pro), using the Vision Pro as a computer or iPad replacement, and checking out third-party apps.

The process is a lot, though it won’t be necessary for purchase. Apple will apparently also sell the headset online. Users will still need to scan their faces with an iPhone or an iPad to get the right head strap, and they’ll need their vision prescription at the ready for the $149 optical inserts.

Gurman writes that Apple has also made a second, more comfortable strap for the headset after complaints that it’s uncomfortable after just 30 minutes of use, although he says this strap won’t be present at the demos. In addition, Belkin will have an accessory clip for the battery pack that lives outside Apple’s headset, according to the article.

Apple reportedly doesn’t expect demand to hold for the Vision Pro, and has told its stores that they’ll need “about twice as much inventory space” during the first weekend than the following ones. A recent supply chain rumor said that Apple only has up to 80,000 of them coming at launch, plus just half a million for all of 2024.

Such low numbers might not do demand for the Vision Pro any more favors than the basic problem of getting people to want an AR / VR headset in the first place. People are already less likely to use one out in a coffee shop. But even if you did see someone doing so, asking a stranger if you can check out their $3,500 head computer is very different from asking if you can toy with their iPhone — they don’t want to let you, and you probably don’t want to anyway. And most people aren’t going to buy one of these without trying it first.

But Apple has plans for its Vision headset line. Rumors have said it means to release a second, cheaper version of the headset. And eventually, the company is expected to make a set of AR glasses that look like normal glasses, at least eventually, when it gets over technical humps. Meanwhile, Meta has aggressively pursued AR glasses with its Ray-Bans partnership, and Xreal just unveiled its $699 Air 2 Ultra AR glasses that are mainly aimed at developers but show that Apple’s potential competition in the space isn’t exactly resting on its laurels.

’Tis the season for AI apps and AI gadgets

’Tis the season for AI apps and AI gadgets
A screenshot of the Installer logo on a green background.
Image: William Joel / The Verge

Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 21, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you’re new here, welcome, sorry for all the bad jokes, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.)

I’ve been in Vegas all week for CES, the annual extravaganza of gadgets and gizmos aplenty, whozits and whatsits galore. Most of what’s here isn’t yet available for purchase (and a lot of it never will be), but I love getting a peek into what the tech industry is dreaming about, so I figured I should share some of the best new stuff here. I’ve also been reading about how Cyberpunk 2077 turned into a hit, learning some new tech minimalism ideas, watching Patriot and rewatching Archer, and trying out a new homescreen layout after discovering the Blank Spaces app for iOS.

I also have for you some awesome updates to old apps, a couple of movies worth streaming this weekend, all the AI silliness you could imagine, an Android launcher worth trying, and much more. Big week, lots of gadgets! Let’s go.

(As always, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. What are you into right now? What should everyone else be into right now? Tell me everything: installer@theverge.com. And if you want to get Installer in your inbox a day early, subscribe here.)


The Drop

  • The GPT Store. I still hate that we’ve allowed “GPT” to become the standard name for AI tools. But alas. OpenAI’s app store is already full of GPTs to help you with research, brainstorming, tattoo design for some reason, and lots more. Lots of fun stuff to play with.
  • Clear 2. The original Clear launched more than a decade ago, and there’s still no to-do list app as fun to use. I’m digging the new version (which is iPhone and iPad-only), too, with all its customizable colors and icons and sounds.
  • True Detective Season 4. Some of True Detective has been near-perfect television. Some of it has been, uh, bad. But I have high hopes for this season, both because Jodie Foster and Kali Reis are starring and because “mysterious disappearance in an Alaska research station” is a premise you just can’t ruin.
  • BBEdit 15. The 30-year-old text editor keeps chugging along, and it keeps being great. The new version has some power-user organizational tools, a really neat ChatGPT interface, and my favorite new thing: a mini map that makes it way easier to find stuff in a huge document.
  • Ayaneo Next Lite. I’m convinced 2024 is going to be The Year of The Gaming Handheld, as the whole tech world tries to copy and one-up the Switch and Steam Deck. Ayaneo had been good at this for a while, and there’s some weirdness around the SteamOS-ness of this one, but it looks like it might be a winner.
  • Killers of the Flower Moon. It’s finally streaming! I look forward to watching this movie 25 minutes at a time on Apple TV Plus, hopefully finishing it right before it wins a bunch of Oscars.
  • Hey Calendar. I churned out of Hey’s email app after a while because while it has lots of good ideas, it was just too much change in my email setup. Calendar strikes a better balance: it’ll import your other events, but then has a ton of smart UI and features (like habit tracking! I love habit tracking!) on top. App Store shenanigans aside, this is just a really nice app.
  • Dunkey’s Guide to Streaming Services. Sometimes it’s nice to be reminded that the streaming TV landscape really is as stupid as it seems. We live in a golden era of content, except nothing makes sense, it’s all too expensive and complicated, and god help you if you just want to watch a Spider-Man movie.
  • Self Reliance. This movie was basically made for me in a lab: I love Jake Johnson and Anna Kendrick, I’m a sucker for the silly premise about a dark-web reality TV show, and I love a good comedy slash thriller slash meta commentary on the modern world. This is top of my Hulu watch list for the weekend.

Spotlight

As I mentioned above, it’s CES time! Usually I spend this week wandering around Las Vegas checking out neat new gadgets, devising strategies for convincing my wife that we totally need a 98-inch TV that costs as much as a house, and trying to figure out what fun trends we’re going to see over the next 12 months.

This year, it was both obvious and not at all surprising what everyone’s thinking about. It’s AI. It’s cars. It’s cars with AI. It’s headphones and smart rings and robot bartenders and projectors and AI inside of all those things, too.

The Verge has a lot of great coverage of all things CES, and you should definitely spend some time poking through our stories and streams. Here are just a few of what I think are the most interesting, Installer-y things in Vegas this year:

  • The Rabbit R1. The most intriguing gadget of the year so far, at least for me. This is a great-looking, Teenage Engineering-designed, surprisingly inexpensive AI device. Can it be more than just a smartphone app? Is its Large Action Model a total privacy disaster? I don’t know! But I find this much more compelling than certain other AI gadgets.
  • The Honda Zero Series. This car concept straight up looks like the Batmobile, and I can’t decide whether I love or hate it for that. But I love that Honda’s looking for ways to make cars lighter and sleeker instead of bigger and truck-ier, and you know? I do want to drive the Batmobile. I love it.
  • Ballie. Projectors were one of the stories of the year this CES, and Samsung’s Ballie — a rolling AI assistant / projector / robot companion — kinda stole my heart. I’m still not sure anyone has made a good case for why you need a robot in your home, but Ballie’s one of the best so far.
  • Xreal Air 2 Ultra. Apple wasn’t at CES, and the Vision Pro was still one of the most-discussed things in Vegas. But I continue to think Xreal is on a cool path: it’s building displays into glasses and giving those displays more and more power. The $699 Air 2 Ultras are heavy on technology and light on cool apps, but that might change fast.
  • Movano’s Evie Ring. I agree with Victoria Song: this is the year of the smart ring. The Evie Ring, which has some impressive health-focused features and is designed specifically for women, is a pretty impressive device — but I suspect we’re going to see a lot more like it this year.
  • The Aqara Hub M3. We’re inching slowly closer to the interoperable smart home we need and deserve, but we’re not there yet. For now, we get super-versatile hubs like this one. Aqara is a rising star in the smart home world, and the hub makes it a serious player.

I’d bet heavily that at least one of these things will never ever actually hit the market. (Ballie and Honda are probably the favorites to never appear.) But the trends here are really interesting: cars are being rethought from the ground up, the screens are starting to follow us around, and everyone is pushing hard to find a new kind of device that isn’t a smartphone or a watch. It’s going to be really fun to see if any of it actually takes off.


The Verge’s Mia Sato warned me when I asked her to share her screen that it was going to be super boring. To which I said, Mia, there are no boring homescreens, only boring people. Wait, no, not that. Only boring app icons? I don’t know. We’ll come back to it.

Mia covers a lot of things for The Verge, and this week wrote a spectacular story about how SEO culture and optimization has changed the way websites work. Everyone’s trying to be seen by Google, and so the whole web looks the way Google wants. It’s a great story, with some amazing illustrations and interactives.

Here’s Mia’s (decidedly not super boring) homescreen, plus some info on the apps she uses and why:

The phone: iPhone 11 Pro.

The wallpaper: I’ve had this wallpaper for almost a decade and across several phones. I have to keep finding a resized version when I upgrade my device. It’s a quote from William Blake, and the design is by artist Tessa Forrest.

The apps: Messages, Photos, Camera, Settings, Google Calendar, Google Maps, Instagram, Slack, Gmail, Clock, Bose Connect, Messenger, Transit, Compass, Notion, Mail, Safari, Phone, Apple Music.

I try to keep my homescreen a neutral space, so it’s heavy on the practical things: camera, photos, calendar, my public transit app, my Bose app for my headphones, Gmail for work. I have messaging apps that I need to keep an eye on: Slack for my job, Messenger for family. Most social media is buried deep on other pages, because otherwise I would be unwell — I don’t know why Instagram is there, to be honest.

I’m obsessed with the Compass app and am a Compass app power user, probably. When you get off the subway, Google Maps is always directionally confused, but the compass app will tell you which way to start walking. Putting Notion on the homescreen is my delusional stretch goal for the year: I’m trying to make a habit of organizing my thoughts instead of writing them on random scraps of paper that are then lost. I leave the bottom row empty so I can swipe without accidentally opening apps.

I also asked Mia to tell us a few things she’s into right now. Here’s what she shared:

  • The Japanese post-harcore / pop-punky band Mass of the Fermenting Dregs. They never tour in the US, and I recently saw them in Brooklyn. The concert vibe was like someone opened several mosh pits at a K-pop concert. Everyone was doing coordinated hand motions. It was perfect. Maybe start here.
  • I have been poring over a set of craft books from the ‘60s and ‘70s called Creative Hands. They have instructions for sewing, knitting, crochet, needlework, beading, literally any kind of home craft project you can think of. I’ve been gatekeeping these because I’m still missing a few editions.
  • My mom got me a subscription to a monthly mystery tinned seafood box. Last month’s included sardine pate, which I forced my friends to try with me, and it was surprisingly incredible spread thin on crackers.
  • I recently hosted a viewing party of Cher’s 1999 Do You Believe? Tour concert movie. It was an HBO special but is unstreamable online, so I ordered a DVD on eBay for $6. I watched this on VHS every single day from the ages of like five to eight, and it formed probably 60 percent of my personality. Put Cher in the Las Vegas Sphere! Then send me to write about it!

Crowdsourced

Here’s what the Installer community is into this week. I want to know what you’re into right now as well! Email installer@theverge.com or message +1 (203) 570-8663 with your recommendations for anything and everything, and we’ll feature some of our favorites here every week.

Thermomix is the next level of kitchen gadgets! It’s been popular in Europe for decades, and they recently launched in the US. We’ve used it almost every day for years, it’s the best appliance! That said, pretty much the only things it doesn’t do are frying and pressure cooking, so your instant pot is still a great companion!” — Christophe

Tamagotchi Adventure Kingdom. The best new game on Apple Arcade! a mix of Hello Kitty Island Adventure, Animal Crossing and Stardew Valley.” — Gabriel

“I recently stumbled across a website called Longreads. It’s a website that curates longer-form articles from different publications in a wide range of subjects. I think we could probably all benefit from going a little slower on the internet in this hyper-consumerism age, and this website is perfect for that. It’s like a really good restaurant in a town full of fast food joints.” — Tommy

“The new season of Dimension 20 came out on Dropout this week — it’s the third season of their very popular ‘Fantasy High’ storyline!” — Zach

Niagara Launcher on my Pixel Fold! I usually shy away from third-party launchers on Pixel phones but I’ve been having a blast with Niagara. It’s super clean, has nice features and has a dev team that communicates!” — Nation

“The book Material World and a refurb Surface Duo as a sort of at-home tablet / widget to futz with.” — Matt

“Watching The Brothers Sun on Netflix. It’s better than expected, a fun action show about the Taiwanese triads. Most of the locations are based in LA.” — Andy

“After leaving Apple Music and Spotify for Plex, one thing I was going to miss was my Wrapped at the end of the year. But I hooked Plex up to ListenBrainz to track my listens, and got an awesome year in review page at the end of the year.” — Michael

Dune. Reading it again in preparation for the second movie later this year.” — Manuel


Signing off

On Thursday this week, I woke up and found out my iPhone had updated overnight. And suddenly it was totally unresponsive. I could wake up the screen, but touch didn’t work, swipes didn’t work, nothing worked. And over the course of a bunch of hours trying to fix it — which I eventually did, by semi-miraculously managing to just factory reset the thing — I realized I’m way too reliant on my phone. I had no other way to log into some apps without my phone for two-factor and QR scanning. I had no good way to reach my wife, because we talk on SMS. It was a bad setup.

So my new 2024 resolution is to make sure I’m not reliant on a single device for anything. I have to rethink my messaging setup, move my passwords and codes to a cross-platform app, and add some redundancy and backup plans to everything. It’s going to be a pain, but I am not eager to relive the feeling I had that morning of just being completely out of luck and out of touch for way too long. It’s the year we go device agnostic, my friends!

See you next week!

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