Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 110, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you’re new here, welcome, happy holidays, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.)
Artificial Intelligence
Our favorite stuff of 2025
This week, I’ve been reading about mall Santas and malleable software and phone bans, wondering how I barely know any of the songs in DJ Earworm’s annual mashup, waiting patiently for Ugmonk’s Layflat notebooks to go back on sale, finally setting up my Switch 2 Camera for some holiday gaming, trying desperately to not come in last place in my fantasy football league, using MCP to build some really weird note-taking workflows in Craft, and learning all the words to Justin Bieber’s rap verse in “Drummer Boy” because I saw someone do it on TikTok.
I also have for you a huge list of all of our favorite stuff from this year. Stuff to read, stuff to watch, apps to try, games to play — this is your holiday season, and probably your 2026, totally sorted. Let’s get into it.
(As always, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. What are you watching / reading / playing / listening to / putting marshmallows into right now? 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.)
My favorite stuff of 2025
By my count (and by “my count” I mean a quick search of Google Docs), we published 45 issues of Installer this year. That’s a lot of stuff! You probably forgot to check out some of it. Heck, I probably forgot to check some of it. But I did a lot of reading, watching, listening, downloading, and everything else-ing this year and wanted to share some of my favorite new (or at least new to me) things from 2025. Here’s a top 10, in no particular order:
- Enshittification. Cory Doctorow’s book was very fun to read, while simultaneously filling me with rage on every page. It explains the world in that way that is just really satisfying and helpful, a real oh so it’s not just me sort of feeling.
- The Sony WH-1000XM6. I bought both these and a pair of AirPods Pro 3 this year and like them both a great deal, but the Sonys are just a cut above. I can wear them all day, they sound great, their noise cancellation is ridiculous. Am I ashamed to admit I wore these a lot while holding screaming newborns this year? A little. But here we are.
- The Nintendo Switch 2. Much as I love the headphones, this is my gadget purchase of the year. I spent years saying all I wanted was a better, faster Switch, and that’s exactly what I got. Life in Mario Kart World is still really good.
- Claude Code. There’s a lot of crappy AI out there, but there’s simply no question that large language models can write workable code for simple projects. I’ve spent the year retuning my brain to solve all my tiny problems by building one-off apps and browser extensions, and suddenly my power knows no bounds.
- Antinote. For all my note-taking systems, I am constantly in need of a quick scratchpad to just do some math or write stuff down. This Mac app is a scratchpad that doubles as a calculator, a timer, a list-maker, and much more. I use it (and the iOS beta!) a million times a day.
- The Studio. Take my 2025 TV recommendations with a grain of salt, because for a lot of life and work reasons I’ve never been so behind on great shows. (Pluribus is about to be my Christmas present to myself.) But I absolutely inhaled this show, which was inventive and weird and made me laugh in a way very few things do.
- Amazon’s Echo Dot Max. I haven’t been a smart speaker guy for years, but we moved into a new house this fall, and I took the opportunity to install some smart lights and a new speaker. Turns out, yes, it’s mostly for music and timers, but having a pretty responsive, pretty nice-sounding music and timers machine is pretty great?
- Philips Hue Essentials. Smart lights are expensive. They also rule. I’ve rigged mine up so that my once too-bright-and-too-cold house now feels cozy and warm all the time. Plus, as a person prone to just leaving lights on all the time for no reason, I am grateful to have a way to darken the whole house without getting out of bed.
- Good Hang. It takes a lot for a new podcast to enter my rotation, and I don’t listen to many celeb-to-celeb podcasts. And yet, I’ve listened to every single one of these Amy Poehler chats. (And judging by the charts, so has everybody else.) The Martin Short episode is one of the most delightful hours you’ll find anywhere.
- Puzzmo. I’ve spent a lot of time trying to find better things to do on my phone, and the trade I recommend most is swapping social media scrolling for five minutes of puzzle games. From Really Bad Chess to Pile-Up Poker, Puzzmo is now one of the few apps I use every single day.
He’s going to hate that I’m saying this, but Jason Kottke is kind of the godfather of the Installerverse. He’s been curating and writing about the internet for decades and is still better at finding unexpected and great things than anyone I know. (He also writes a heck of a gift guide.) So it would not surprise you that he’s been on my screen share list since the very beginning.
For this, our last issue of the year, Jason agreed to share his homescreen with us, which I’m taking as a sign that he’s not totally furious with me for stealing links from him all the time. Victory. Here it is, plus some info on the apps he uses and why:
The phone: iPhone 17 Pro. Not orange. I’ve never used another smartphone aside from the iPhone. I like my groove / rut. I do not like Liquid Glass though.
The wallpaper: It’s a photo I took of a sandbar while on vacation in Mexico a few years ago. I generally rotate photos every few months, when I shoot or find something new, but I keep coming back to this one.
The apps: Pedometer, Apple Sports, Apple Notes, Tesla, Calendar, Passwords, App Store, Photos, Amazon, AllTrails, Kottke.org, Camera, Weather, Clock, Feedbin, Google Maps, Strava, Swarm, Gmail, Settings, Phone, Messages, Safari.
Welcome to my normcore homescreen. I don’t really spend a lot of time evaluating new apps or whatever. I probably have more stock Apple apps on my homescreen than your usual interviewee: Notes, Weather, Camera, Photos, Sports (for football — not handegg football, foot football), Calendar, Passwords, Phone, Messages, Settings, and Clock. I dunno, they work fine for me… my life isn’t that complicated and I want to keep it that way. The odd app out is probably Swarm; I’ve been using Foursquare / Swarm to check in to places since they launched. I find it very useful as a database of places I’ve been.
I moved all of my social apps to screens further inland, in the hopes that I’d use them less, but I’m always swiping over to them anyway because they are tiny casinos with a hold on my brain and also my job. (Not a great position to be in sometimes TBH!)
I also asked Jason to share a few things they’re into right now. Here’s what he sent back:
- You know who’s really great at their jobs? Ken Burns and his collaborators. I’ve been watching The American Revolution on PBS, and it’s just so interesting. It’s the kind of show I put on and 10 minutes in, I’m like, oh no, I actually wanted to go to sleep before 1AM tonight…
- Opus 4.5 and Claude Code are sort of magical. It’s stunning what it can do with very little hand-holding. A true disruptive inflection point.
- I’m trying to get serious about saving links and notes, so I’ve been experimenting with throwing everything I might want to see again into Raindrop. Input works smoothly, but I haven’t had much chance to grab stuff out of it yet. Gotta sow before you reap.
Now it’s your turn: Here’s what the Installer community loved this year. Thanks as always to everyone who emails, texts, DMs, and sends carrier pigeons every week! I read every single thing that comes through, though I confess I’m not as good at responding to everything as I’d like to be. (Especially on weeks like this, when I open the inbox to so much good stuff!) Please know that even if I don’t respond, I’m very grateful… and also that I feel bad and wish I responded more often.
As always, you can mail installer@theverge.com or message me on Signal — @davidpierce.11 — with your recommendations for anything and everything. Tell me what you get and give for the holidays! I want to hear all about it. Now, without further ado:
“The Keychron Q1 HE keyboard that I’m currently tapping away on. It’s heavy as a brick, wonderful to type on, can be customised up the wazoo and is very slick to look at, in black, cream and a single red Escape key (the ANSI version apparently has a red Enter key as well, but not the ISO I’m using…).” — Anders
“Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir. I got back into reading this summer and read all three of his novels. Only after I finished Project Hail Mary did I figure out it’s coming out as a movie next year, so that was fun!” — Michael
“Home Assistant Green. I was hesitant to go for it and I don’t regret it. It’s an amazing thing. I have several sensors connected via Zigbee and I love automation. I only buy new things that can be integrated into Home Assistant. I highly recommend it.” — Andris
“In April 2024 I became a father, and have been obsessively taking photos on my iPhone. I got sick of how every photo looked the same and in May 2025, bought a used Fujifilm X100V (after reading the Verge review of the X Half and going down a rabbit hole of what camera I wanted). I love being that dad with a camera around my neck and the photos are great.” — Zayd
“My favorite tech-thing of the year is vibe coding! I’m a marketer with a very low level in development (I vaguely understand html and css). This year, thanks to Gemini, ChatGPT and Claude, I’ve created working web apps, from my personal website to an NFT minting page to a directory of self-hosted websites! My advice is that if you have this little idea in your head, talk about it with Gemini, you’ll be surprised to see how far it can go.” — Rémi
“Loving the new-to-me Apple Vision Pro. Work, entertainment etc are awesome in it. Couldn’t convince myself at MSRP, but at under $2,000 in the used market it’s awesome. Wish I had gotten one last year!” — Tony
“For me it’s TRMNL. It’s such a nice and well thought out device supported by a great software platform. It allows me to tinker, but also to just use the ready made plugins without hassle.” — Estof
“I started leasing a Riddara EV pickup, and I honestly love it. Coolest thing about it was reverse charging, even though I didn’t use it but just in case I’m running out of battery on my other EVs, I could use it to top it off. In terms of performance, it’s instantly fast, doing 0-60 in 4.5 seconds! Such a fun EV pickup!” — Abdulla
“Christopher Ruocchio’s Sun Eater series wrapped up in 2025, and it is far and away the sci-fi space opera I’ve ever read. I’d encourage fans of strong prose, deep and long tailed character development and tens-of-chapters long battles to dive in.” — Jon
“Mine would have to be Android handhelds like the AYN Odin 2 Portal. Think of an ARM-based Steam Deck. It can run Android, emulation, and Steam games. The latter using Gamehub. Also has WiFi 7 and an OLED screen. Because it’s ARM, the battery life is much better than x86 handhelds.” — Alric
“The book Apple in China by Patrick McGee was hands down my favorite read of the year. Illuminates Apple’s larger-than-the-Marshall Plan impact on the Chinese technology manufacturing since the late 90s. So much to unpack from this masterfully told story.” — Cary
“AirPods Pro and the Dungeons and Daddies podcast! Many late nights with headphones in listening to this D&D podcast about four dads searching the realm for their kids. Turns out professional actors/comedians playing D&D is the best?” — Matt
“My favourite new-to-me thing of this year was discovering the wonders of the HP-1xC calculators. Launched in 1981/82, this series of calculators covered three very different domains of calculation: financial (HP-12C), scientific (HP-11C and HP-15C) and programming (HP-16C). They were programmable, highly versatile and ruggedly built. Their batteries lasted decades. And, being HP, they of course used Reverse Polish Notation. Despite being intended merely as a stopgap, the series was sold for most of the 1980s but the HP-12C has never been discontinued and is still being sold today.” — William
“Mymind. Simply brilliant, fast, intuitive, elegant and useful.” — Nicos
“The Empire of the Vampire by Jay Kristoff. As the title implies, it’s a vampire story. It’s bloody and brutal, the world lives in eternal winter, it’s surprisingly Catholic in its lore, one of the main characters is queer. And it’s told in a neat way: The protagonist is prompted by his enemy to tell his life story. This put me in a vampire binge over the spring and summer.” — Hannes
“I picked up a Selphy Photo Printer in late November to bring to life a ‘Movie Wall’ I’ve been wanting to do forever. From Thanksgiving to Christmas we only watch holiday movies + TV. I wanted a way to visualize our choices in a more fun way to avoid the dreaded ‘What are we going to watch?’ conversation.” — Taylor
One more time, I just want to say thank you. Thank you to everyone who sends me recommendations, because Installer literally wouldn’t happen without you. (Every week, I’m afraid it’s the week no one will share, and every week I’m grateful I’m wrong.) Thank you to everyone who clicks the links — I hear from creators and developers every single week who are thrilled at how many Installer readers are checking out their stuff, and it makes me so happy to be able to shine a light on good things. Thank you to everyone who sends Group Project ideas, which I want to do even more of next year. Thank you even to everyone who subscribes and then never opens a single email, because the number still goes up, you know?
There’s so much out there vying for your time and attention, and one of the things I hope to do here is be a source of stuff worthy of them both. I have lots of ideas for how to do that even better next year, but please know that none of it works without you. I hope you all have a lovely holiday season, get some rest, and come ready to rock in 2026.
Artificial Intelligence
Ronnie Sheth, CEO, SENEN Group: Why now is the time for enterprise AI to ‘get practical'
Before you set sail on your AI journey, always check the state of your data – because if there is one thing likely to sink your ship, it is data quality.
Gartner estimates that poor data quality costs organisations an average of $12.9 million each year in wasted resources and lost opportunities. That’s the bad news. The good news is that organisations are increasingly understanding the importance of their data quality – and less likely to fall into this trap.
That’s the view of Ronnie Sheth, CEO of AI strategy, execution and governance firm SENEN Group. The company focuses on data and AI advisory, operationalisation and literacy, and Sheth notes she has been in the data and AI space ‘ever since [she] was a corporate baby’, so there is plenty of real-world experience behind the viewpoint. There is also plenty of success; Sheth notes that her company has a 99.99% client repeat rate.
“If I were to be very practical, the one thing I’ve noticed is companies jump into adopting AI before they’re ready,” says Sheth. Companies, she notes, will have an executive direction insisting they adopt AI, but without a blueprint or roadmap to accompany it. The result may be impressive user numbers, but with no measurable outcome to back anything up.
Even as recently as 2024, Sheth saw many organisations struggling because their data was ‘nowhere where it needed to be.’ “Not even close,” she adds. Now, the conversation has turned more practical and strategic. Companies are realising this, and coming to SENEN Group initially to get help with their data, rather than wanting to adopt AI immediately.
“When companies like that come to us, the first course of order is really fixing their data,” says Sheth. “The next course of order is getting to their AI model. They are building a strong foundation for any AI initiative that comes after that.
“Once they fix their data, they can build as many AI models as they want, and they can have as many AI solutions as they want, and they will get accurate outputs because now they have a strong foundation,” Sheth adds.
With breadth and depth in expertise, SENEN Group allows organisations to right their course. Sheth notes the example of one customer who came to them wanting a data governance initiative. Ultimately, it was the data strategy which was needed – the why and how, the outcomes of what they were trying to do with their data – before adding in governance and providing a roadmap for an operating model. “They’ve moved from raw data to descriptive analytics, moving into predictive analytics, and now we’re actually setting up an AI strategy for them,” says Sheth.
It is this attitude and requirement for practical initiatives which will be the cornerstone of Sheth’s discussion at AI & Big Data Expo Global in London this week. “Now would be the time to get practical with AI, especially enterprise AI adoption, and not think about ‘look, we’re going to innovate, we’re going to do pilots, we’re going to experiment,’” says Sheth. “Now is not the time to do that. Now is the time to get practical, to get AI to value. This is the year to do that in the enterprise.”
Watch the full video conversation with Ronnie Sheth below:
Artificial Intelligence
Apptio: Why scaling intelligent automation requires financial rigour
Greg Holmes, Field CTO for EMEA at Apptio, an IBM company, argues that successfully scaling intelligent automation requires financial rigour.
The “build it and they will come” model of technology adoption often leaves a hole in the budget when applied to automation. Executives frequently find that successful pilot programmes do not translate into sustainable enterprise-wide deployments because initial financial modelling ignored the realities of production scaling.
“When we integrate FinOps capabilities with automation, we’re looking at a change from being very reactive on cost management to being very proactive around value engineering,” says Holmes.
This shifts the assessment criteria for technical leaders. Rather than waiting “months or years to assess whether things are getting value,” engineering teams can track resource consumption – such as cost per transaction or API call – “straight from the beginning.”
The unit economics of scaling intelligent automation
Innovation projects face a high mortality rate. Holmes notes that around 80 percent of new innovation projects fail, often because financial opacity during the pilot phase masks future liabilities.
“If a pilot demonstrates that automating a process saves, say, 100 hours a month, leadership thinks that’s really successful,” says Holmes. “But what it fails to track is that the pilot sometimes is running on over-provisioned infrastructure, so it looks like it performs really well. But you wouldn’t over-provision to that degree during a real production rollout.”
Moving that workload to production changes the calculus. The requirements for compute, storage, and data transfer increase. “API calls can multiply, exceptions and edge cases appear at volume that might have been out of scope for the pilot phase, and then support overheads just grow as well,” he adds.
To prevent this, organisations must track the marginal cost at scale. This involves monitoring unit economics, such as the cost per customer served or cost per transaction. If the cost per customer increases as the customer base grows, the business model is flawed.
Conversely, effective scaling should see these unit costs decrease. Holmes cites a case study from Liberty Mutual where the insurer was able to find around $2.5 million of savings by bringing in consumption metrics and “not just looking at labour hours that they were saving.”
However, financial accountability cannot sit solely with the finance department. Holmes advocates for putting governance “back in the hands of the developers into their development tools and workloads.”
Integration with infrastructure-as-code tools like HashiCorp Terraform and GitHub allows organisations to enforce policies during deployment. Teams can spin up resources programmatically with immediate cost estimates.
“Rather than deploying things and then fixing them up, which gets into the whole whack-a-mole kind of problem,” Holmes explains, companies can verify they are “deploying the right things at the right time.”
When scaling intelligent automation, tension often simmers between the CFO, who focuses on return on investment, and the Head of Automation, who tracks operational metrics like hours saved.
“This translation challenge is precisely what TBM (Technology Business Management) and Apptio are designed to solve,” says Holmes. “It’s having a common language between technology and finance and with the business.”
The TBM taxonomy provides a standardised framework to reconcile these views. It maps technical resources (such as compute, storage, and labour) into IT towers and further up to business capabilities. This structure translates technical inputs into business outputs.
“I don’t necessarily know what goes into all the IT layers underneath it,” Holmes says, describing the business user’s perspective. “But because we’ve got this taxonomy, I can get a detailed bill that tells me about my service consumption and precisely which costs are driving it to be more expensive as I consume more.”
Addressing legacy debt and budgeting for the long-term
Organisations burdened by legacy ERP systems face a binary choice: automation as a patch, or as a bridge to modernisation. Holmes warns that if a company is “just trying to mask inefficient processes and not redesign them,” they are merely “building up more technical debt.”
A total cost of ownership (TCO) approach helps determine the correct strategy. The Commonwealth Bank of Australia utilised a TCO model across 2,000 different applications – of various maturity stages – to assess their full lifecycle costs. This analysis included hidden costs such as infrastructure, labour, and the engineering time required to keep automation running.
“Just because of something’s legacy doesn’t mean you have to retire it,” says Holmes. “Some of those legacy systems are worth maintaining just because the value is so good.”
In other cases, calculating the cost of the automation wrappers required to keep an old system functional reveals a different reality. “Sometimes when you add up the TCO approach, and you’re including all these automation layers around it, you suddenly realise, the real cost of keeping that old system alive is not just the old system, it’s those extra layers,” Holmes argues.
Avoiding sticker shock requires a budgeting strategy that balances variable costs with long-term commitments. While variable costs (OPEX) offer flexibility, they can fluctuate wildly based on demand and engineering efficiency.
Holmes advises that longer-term visibility enables better investment decisions. Committing to specific technologies or platforms over a multi-year horizon allows organisations to negotiate economies of scale and standardise architecture.
“Because you’ve made those longer term commitments and you’ve standardised on different platforms and things like that, it makes it easier to build the right thing out for the long term,” Holmes says.
Combining tight management of variable costs with strategic commitments supports enterprises in scaling intelligent automation without the volatility that often derails transformation.
IBM is a key sponsor of this year’s Intelligent Automation Conference Global in London on 4-5 February 2026. Greg Holmes and other experts will be sharing their insights during the event. Be sure to check out the day one panel session, Scaling Intelligent Automation Successfully: Frameworks, Risks, and Real-World Lessons, to hear more from Holmes and swing by IBM’s booth at stand #362.
See also: Klarna backs Google UCP to power AI agent payments

Want to learn more about AI and big data from industry leaders? Check out AI & Big Data Expo taking place in Amsterdam, California, and London. The comprehensive event is part of TechEx and is co-located with other leading technology events including the Cyber Security & Cloud Expo. Click here for more information.
AI News is powered by TechForge Media. Explore other upcoming enterprise technology events and webinars here.
Artificial Intelligence
FedEx tests how far AI can go in tracking and returns management
FedEx is using AI to change how package tracking and returns work for large enterprise shippers. For companies moving high volumes of goods, tracking no longer ends when a package leaves the warehouse. Customers expect real-time updates, flexible delivery options, and returns that do not turn into support tickets or delays.
That pressure is pushing logistics firms to rethink how tracking and returns operate at scale, especially across complex supply chains.
This is where artificial intelligence is starting to move from pilot projects into daily operations.
FedEx plans to roll out AI-powered tracking and returns tools designed for enterprise shippers, according to a report by PYMNTS. The tools are aimed at automating routine customer service tasks, improving visibility into shipments, and reducing friction when packages need to be rerouted or sent back.
Rather than focusing on consumer-facing chatbots, the effort centres on operational workflows that sit behind the scenes. These are the systems enterprise customers rely on to manage exceptions, returns, and delivery changes without manual intervention.
How FedEx is applying AI to package tracking
Traditional tracking systems tell customers where a package is and when it might arrive. AI-powered tracking takes a step further by utilising historical delivery data, traffic patterns, weather conditions, and network constraints to flag potential delays before they happen.
According to the PYMNTS report, FedEx’s AI tools are designed to help enterprise shippers anticipate issues earlier in the delivery process. Instead of reacting to missed delivery windows, shippers may be able to reroute packages or notify customers ahead of time.
For businesses that ship thousands of parcels per day, that shift matters. Small improvements in prediction accuracy can reduce support calls, lower refund rates, and improve customer trust, particularly in retail, healthcare, and manufacturing supply chains.
This approach also reflects a broader trend in enterprise software, in which AI is being embedded into existing systems rather than introduced as standalone tools. The goal is not to replace logistics teams, but to minimise the number of manual decisions they need to make.
Returns as an operational problem, not a customer issue
Returns are one of the most expensive parts of logistics. For enterprise shippers, particularly those in e-commerce, returns affect warehouse capacity, inventory planning, and transportation costs.
According to PYMNTS, FedEx’s AI-enabled returns tools aim to automate parts of the returns process, including label generation, routing decisions, and status updates. Companies that use AI to determine the most efficient return path may be able to reduce delays and avoid returning things to the wrong facility.
This is less about convenience and more about operational discipline. Returns that sit idle or move through the wrong channel create cost and uncertainty across the supply chain. AI systems trained on past return patterns can help standardise decisions that were previously handled case by case.
For enterprise customers, this type of automation supports scale. As return volumes fluctuate, especially during peak seasons, systems that adjust automatically reduce the need for temporary staffing or manual overrides.
What FedEx’s AI tracking approach says about enterprise adoption
What stands out in FedEx’s approach is how narrowly focused the AI use case is. There are no broad claims about transformation or reinvention. The emphasis is on reducing friction in processes that already exist.
This mirrors how other large organisations are adopting AI internally. In a separate context, Microsoft described a similar pattern in its article. The company outlined how AI tools were rolled out gradually, with clear limits, governance rules, and feedback loops.
While Microsoft’s case focused on knowledge work and FedEx’s on logistics operations, the underlying lesson is the same. AI adoption tends to work best when applied to specific activities with measurable results rather than broad promises of efficiency.
For logistics firms, those advantages include fewer delivery exceptions, lower return handling costs, and better coordination between shipping partners and enterprise clients.
What this signals for enterprise customers
For end-user companies, FedEx’s move signals that logistics providers are investing in AI as a way to support more complex shipping demands. As supply chains become more distributed, visibility and predictability become harder to maintain without automation.
AI-driven tracking and returns could also change how businesses measure logistics performance. Companies may focus less on delivery speed and more on how quickly issues are recognised and resolved.
That shift could influence procurement decisions, contract structures, and service-level agreements. Enterprise customers may start asking not just where a shipment is, but how well a provider anticipates problems.
FedEx’s plans reflect a quieter phase of enterprise AI adoption. The focus is less on experimentation and more on integration. These systems are not designed to draw attention but to reduce noise in operations that customers only notice when something goes wrong.
(Photo by Liam Kevan)
See also: PepsiCo is using AI to rethink how factories are designed and updated
Want to learn more about AI and big data from industry leaders? Check out AI & Big Data Expo taking place in Amsterdam, California, and London. The comprehensive event is part of TechEx and is co-located with other leading technology events, click here for more information.
AI News is powered by TechForge Media. Explore other upcoming enterprise technology events and webinars here.
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