Summer Lovin’: Wonderful Tech Things I’ve Tried This Summer

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What I wanted to write was a serious, hard-hitting piece about doxxing. And eventually I’ll do that, believe you me. But right now I’m on a DIY writing retreat, lazily banging out a thousand words a day and then reading by a pool. It’s really hard to write on such a grim topic with a hibiscus margarita in hand, having just finished A Room of One’s Own and planning to Virginia Woolf the fuck out on my return. While there are many important topics that are hard hitting and deserve some serious talk, we also deserve happy, fun things too. So from an assortment of categories that have randomly occurred to me, here are my Summer Tech Favorites. What are yours?


Favorite New Tech Website: Gadgette

Gadgette is a website for women who are into tech. Now I’m not saying women can’t or shouldn’t enjoy the tech website standards, but it is kind of nice to have a space aimed at women in tech — if just to reassure us that enough of us exist to enjoy a space made just for us. And to boot, the site is very pretty and has fun content. Alas, I found out about Gadgette when our own Carmen Rios shared a link to this Guardian piece by Holly Brockwell, the site’s founder who endured attack for creating the site — I can imagine she’s getting it from all sides. From the Guardian piece:

So yes, my site has ‘feminine’ branding. Yes, we cover fashion and beauty as well as phones and drones. And that is entirely deliberate. It’s okay to be a woman who likes tech. It’s also OK to not like clothes and makeup. But many people seem to believe that to achieve equality, we all have to pretend we’re genderless, faceless ‘users’, and that doesn’t help anyone. Acceptance isn’t about ditching who you are to fit in with the crowd. It’s about the crowd recognising that you have differences and welcoming them.

Why shouldn’t it be OK to talk about which fitness trackers best fit a woman’s wrist? Why shouldn’t it be acceptable to consider beauty gadgets from a tech perspective? And why shouldn’t we be able to say we’re for women without saying we don’t like men? Supporting A doesn’t mean you attack B. This reductive line of thinking is hampering progress in equality.

The same goes for women in tech. There’s a valid argument that by marking ourselves out as a separate group, we’re making it harder to be seamlessly included. But I don’t think that’s what we should be aiming for. Every human is as different from the next as they are the same, and that’s not something we should try to erase.

Many things on Gadgette are outside my personal line of interest; many are not; some are just outside my postal code. That it exists is something to be really pumped about.


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Favorite Web App: Habit RPG

Our very own Heather introduced me to Habit RPG, the to-do list where checking off each item is a battle to be won and you level up your avatar into rogues and mages. It’s the nerdiest to-do list I ever did see, and it should come as no surprise that it’s been working for me this summer. Join guilds, form parties and go on quests all while actually completing things in your personal or work life. What motivates me most is finding and hatching pets — that should come as no surprise given how obsessed I am with Pokémon. Habit RPG works best as a web app, but they did recently release a new phone app called Habitica that I haven’t gotten a chance to play with yet. Both are free, with purchases available if you want to go on certain quests. My only wish is that Habit RPG were a little prettier, but there’s a certain 8-bit charm.


Favorite Phone App: VSCOcam

Okay, okay, so I already wrote about VSCOcam this Summer. But since writing that post, I’ve been OBSESSED with this photo-taking and -editing app. I was first introduced to VSCO as a company when my awesome former roommate started posting photos on Instagram with the #VSCOcam hashtag. Now this particular awesome roommate is a photographer and designer, so it’s no wonder that all her images taken using VSCOcam were super appealing. I’ve been sending many of my photos taken and edited with VSCOcam to Instagram (it’s real easy to do, and has def upped my Instagram game), but I truly wish that we could make the VSCO Grid the next big photosharing social media craze because, unlike Insta, you don’t have to crop your beautiful photos into squares. Because I want this to happen, Imma share my Grid — won’t you please share yours?

VSCOcam is free on both iOS and Android, with optional in-app purchases if you’d like more filters than the defaults.


Favorite Kickstarter: Jewelbots

Jewelbots are friendship bracelets that teach pre-teen girls how to code. They function out of the box with a smart phone app, but they’re also open source and entirely programmable. So girls can do everything from make it light up when their friends are in the vicinity to fly a drone. Basically, I want one real bad and I don’t care that it’s super far outside my aesthetic.

Our fabulous Intern Chloe found this first, and she’s gonna do something a little more detailed about programmable gadgets in a hot sec. But, despite the fact that our readership is largely past the age bracket these are intended for, I’m also assuming y’all are gonna want one of these as badly as I do. And so I wanted to get the word out there while there are still some pre-orders available. Consider backing this Kickstarter to grab a Jewelbot for the pre-teen girl in your life…or, ya know, for you and your friends because this is badass and friendship bracelets should DEFINITELY exist into adulthood. Only 12 days to go!


Favorite Email Newsletter: Two Bossy Dames

Okay, so I wasn’t super sold on email newsletters, because why wouldn’t I just subscribe to the blog? And also wouldn’t it be too much like marketing emails? But then our very own Beth came to stay with me for a tiny little bit when she was visiting New York City, and she sold me on the idea of your fave writers heading right to your inbox. Mostly I was convinced because her email newsletter is so good and, if I were going to pick anything done by Autostraddle writers in this post, I’d have picked her newsletter for this slot. Highly recommend, go check it out.

Anyhow, after a couple of recommendations from her, I found the aesthetic of the newsletter to be more personal — almost like a zine or something. I started signing up with wild abandon — I even signed up for Lena Dunham’s new email newsletter. I was fortunate enough to find Two Bossy Dames after my fiancée (who thinks Magic Mike XXL is a feminist dream) made me listen to an NPR Pop Culture Happy Hour on the subject. Margaret Willison was part of that, and when they said “email newsletter” and “two bossy dames” I googled and signed up immediately while still listening. That means I’ve only gotten a couple newsletters and I STILL think this is my favorite one of the summer. They are highly skilled in the art of the gif. They drew my attention to this New Yorker piece.

It is free to receive Two Bossy Dames in your inbox. They are kind of like cool, straight cousins.


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Favorite Game: Broken Age

So we’ve written about Broken Age here before, but the game was released in two acts. The second act was just released in April, which was after we wrote about it and during my semester. I FINALLY got to play through the whole game this summer and whew, I’m glad I did! The game follows Vella and Shay as they both challenge and change the paths that family and tradition have set out for them, and the second act both furthered these themes and also felt like the second act of Into The Woods; it felt like a reckoning, like there was darkness behind the growing up. The easier nature of the first act was smashed to smithereens with much harder puzzles in the second. It didn’t lose the beautiful animation, the charming characters and the poignant, fun (and feminist) storyline. It’s not a shoot-shoot-kill game, but rather a whimsical novel you play through; actually, it reminded me a lot of Myst. I almost called up one of my childhood best friends — the one I used to play all the computer games with, Myst included, — and made her sit next to me and take turns controlling the Vella and Shay. I did not, because I wound up playing late into the night and we have real people jobs and stuff that mean we can’t be at each others apartments playing computer games until four in the morning.

You can grab Broken Age on Steam and Playstation for 24.99, or for iOS and Android for $9.99.


I asked before and I’ll ask it again: what are your Summer tech favorites? Create your own categories or tell me EXACTLY why I’m wrong in mine.

This has been the one-hundred-thirty-eighth installment of Queer Your Tech with Fun, Autostraddle’s nerdy tech column. Not everything we cover is queer per se, but we talk about customizing this awesome technology you’ve got. Having it our way, expressing our appy selves just like we do with our identities. Here we can talk about anything from app recommendations to choosing a wireless printer to websites you have to bookmark to any other fun shit we can do with technology. Header by Rory Midhani.

Before you go! Autostraddle runs on the reader support of our AF+ Members. If this article meant something to you today — if it informed you or made you smile or feel seen, will you consider joining AF and supporting the people who make this queer media site possible?

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A.E. Osworth

A.E. Osworth is part-time Faculty at The New School, where they teach undergraduates the art of digital storytelling. Their novel, We Are Watching Eliza Bright, about a game developer dealing with harassment (and narrated collectively by a fictional subreddit), is forthcoming from Grand Central Publishing (April 2021) and is available for pre-order now. They have an eight-year freelancing career and you can find their work on Autostraddle (where they used to be the Geekery Editor), Guernica, Quartz, Electric Lit, Paper Darts, Mashable, and drDoctor, among others.

A.E. has written 542 articles for us.

33 Comments

  1. I remember trying VSCOcam very briefly and uninstalled it. I was like this way too much with instagram and everything else. HAHA. My cousin does wonderful pictures with it though.

  2. Oh my gosh! HabitRPG is my JAM! I’d love to make friends with fellow Habiticans if anyone else is using the app!

  3. Omg Habit RPG sounds like a way better thing to get addicted to than scrolling through my Facebook newsfeed. Yes!

  4. I’m interested in programmable/wearable tech so I’ll keep an eye out for that post. The Jewelbots look cool, though I wasn’t very girly even as a preteen so I don’t know if I’d have worn a bracelet with a flower charm.

  5. I’ve been looking for a new task/to-do manager since school ended and everything in my life stopped making sense (I used to use Todoist), HabitRPG sounds perfect. Thanks Ali!

  6. Anyone have the spare cash to form an Autostraddle guild on HabitRPG? (Also, staff, it’s okay if we have an unofficial AS group right?)

    • i started it when I saw Heather mention something about it somewhere but have never used it and this reminded me that i wanted to start using it/figure it out!

  7. the jewelbot thing is literally making me cry right now I am an emotional wrech over this tech
    this is the most beautiful thing I have ever seen
    as a kid interested in computers, that was always a “boy thing” and trying to get the boys to respect me as this sparkly fluffy pink princess, meant hanging up my tiara for most of my childhood, and I hated it.
    so whenever I see this idea that girly girls are allowed to bust out in their petticoats and do some insane tech shit, I will literally break down in an emotional pile and weep because it just matters so much to me good lord
    we need this in every color,
    we need so many of this exact thing
    all over the place, all the time forever, amen.

    • I’m super happy that you guys are also getting way emotional over it because when Chloe sent it to me I almost died of happy and also feels. Because I would have been ALL OVER THIS as a kid and also I really want one of these right now as an adult human. I just had a lot of emotions, it’s fine.

  8. Okay, I just joined HabitRPG and I’ve never been more excited to be productive. Thanks for introducing us to this!

  9. I tried HabitRPG but it irritated me that you couldn’t retroactively tick things off on your to do list -.- I have a terrible memory and I’m always going to be like “oh yeah i accomplished all these things! …yesterday”

    At the moment I’m using Habit Bull, which is an android app with the whole “don’t break the chain” philosophy, and it’s pretty awesome! You can set how many days a week you want to do things or only on specific days or every day and it’s been really good at keeping me on track with my writing.

  10. I just joined HabitRPG as well!! It has been so much fun setting it up (I hope I can remember to check it every day).

    Anyone want to be friends? :)

      • Yeah, that’s the thing about HabitRPG. Definitely a learning curve to it, but once you get the hang of it, it’s really motivating!

        • I went ahead and made it my homepage, if nothing else it will quietly nag me when I open a new page. :) I hope to find it more and more useful for organizing my life.

        • A guild would be more appropriate, since parties aren’t supposed to be too large, but forming one costs four gems, and gems cost RL money (or contributions to the site, so if no one else does it first, I might form that guild soon).

  11. I have been on a quest to find a to do list / checklist app that works well for daily things and couldn’t find anything i liked.
    I just downloaded the habit app and it is perfect!
    I think the game aspect will help keep me motivated!

  12. HabitRPG looks awesome. I have pretty unmanaged ADD, and am a big gamer. After hearing Jane McGonigal speak previously about games and “gamification,” I was very fascinated in the effects on the brain. She’s recently followed it up with a book applying the same game principles to overcoming personal psychological hurdles (not sure if it’s out yet) and a similar website called superbetter.com that offers tools to help create a game-like structure of support in your own life.

    I was super excited about trying that, but didn’t like that it was a pretty rigid format/ more of a demonstration of the idea rather than a usable product. HabitRPG seems like exactly what I was trying to do in on my own! If anyone wants to try it and keep morale support together, let me know!

    • Thank you for posting about Superbetter! What a great find! I’m exploring it now!

  13. HabitRPG is the best! It keeps me motivated because I know that if I’m too lazy and skip a daily, I will be hurting not only myself but also the rest of my party (currently just me and my girlfriend). It really helps to hold me accountable. I also really like hatching and raising the pets :P

  14. I love HabitRPG (now called Habitica)! I tried it last year before I decided I was just too lazy to do anything, but I’m giving it another try since a couple of weeks ago and the development since then was amazing. The people who run it are clearly so dedicated and involved with the community – have you checked out the tumblr tag? Fanart, even cosplays, people sharing their tasks and improvement – it’s just really inspiring and I’m so glad it’s been featured on AS.

    (Though I disagree and think it’s so pretty as it is.)

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