Tech / Technology

Emma Rogue, Gen Z thrifting queen, on ‘childhood nostalgia-core’ and the future of fashion

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Emma Rogue, Instagram creator and thrift queen, on Gen Z ‘nostalgia-core’ and how technology is making fashion ‘accessible to the masses.’
Three photos of Emma (one of her in the glasses, one smiling, one of her throwing up two gya-ru peace signs.

We’re hanging out at Emma Rogue’s thrifting dreamland in downtown Manhattan, the physical embodiment of her adoration of the last 30 years of style. A handful of young women in exquisitely curated outfits sift through clothing racks as the Pussycat Dolls and Backstreet Boys play in the background. Tees and trinkets from the early 2000s adorn the walls, making the shop feel more like Emma’s childhood bedroom than a booming thrift business.

Emma knows a thing or two about looking good. Her Instagram and TikTok videos celebrate New York street style, spotlighting the looks of strangers, celebs, and fellow creators alike. But today, she’s trying something completely new: wading into the waters of wearable tech.

Emma is one of a handful of creators tapped to bring Meta’s “It’s Your World” campaign to life by showing people how the nebulous (and sometimes confusing) world of AI and the metaverse can be put to use IRL. The company’s new Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses are her first piece of wearable tech. The shades can livestream, shoot photos and videos, play music, and offer assistance via Meta AI, and she’s already filmed a few clips on them for her Instagram.

In between shots, Mashable asks Emma about her vision for the future and digital fashion.

Mashable: Thrifting can be an accessible form of fashion. How do you see tech making fashion more accessible?

Emma Rogue: Everything, in every way. With Rogue, we utilize Instagram Reels’ short-form videos a lot. It’s become integral to our business model. We do short-form interviews with customers who come to us organically through word of mouth or if they’ve seen us online. A lot of the time, they’re wearing thrifted outfits, [so] just being able to showcase that online and show our viewers that, yes, you can dress in an amazing fit and it all be from the thrift. That’s a great form of making it accessible to the masses.

A lot of times people are afraid of style, right? You might be scared to tap into that world. So when they see someone that looks similar to them or their age looking amazing, and they realize it’s all thrifted, it might spark a light in their head like, “Oh, maybe I could try doing that.” They’re gonna screenshot that outfit, then they’re gonna go to their local thrift and be like, “OK, I love her look, let me try to recreate it.”

So that’s one way we do it. Every day we post a video. Volume and consistency are key in the content game. It’s the Victoria Paris method, shout out [to] Victoria. I love her. She sold with me on my opening day.

I think the first time I saw you online was in Caleb Simpson’s apartment tour series. You showed him your Pop-Tarts collab. 

Oh yeah, right there! [points to a Pop-Tarts box in display case.] And our Guinness World Record is right over there, too. We built the world’s biggest Pop-Tarts throne, 8 feet!

Where is the throne now?

In my parent’s garage in New Jersey. A lot of my stuff has been removed from it, but the throne remains.

Are you into digital fashion at all? How do you dress in the digital world?

I don’t have a gaming avatar, but I would dress it in something I would not wear every day because it’s maybe a little uncomfortable. I would put myself in a peak Emma fit: big platforms — I just got my first ever Rick [Owens] shoes so I might do some crazy Rick heels — thigh highs, a cute mini skirt, maybe a cargo mini? That would be cute. A mesh long sleeve and a tank top on top of that, a strappy cami. Accessories everywhere. A lot of metal rings, pigtails, with two strands of hair in front. And arm warmers and leg warmers.

I’m so excited for the day Rogue exists in the metaverse and customers all over the world can shop our stuff there.

Have you been talking about opening a Rogue in the metaverse?

I have a friend who’s really into the metaverse. He’s like “Emma, you gotta get on, buy some land, and build Rogue!” I’m not that deep into it. I haven’t bought land yet because I’m kind of nervous. But I’m excited for when it comes.

The thing is, we have such a big audience. It pains me when they say like, “Build a Rogue in London!” or “Come make a Rogue in Italy!” or I’ll get a DM from some kid in Germany, and they’ll say, “Can you come to this little town in the middle of nowhere?” So if Rogue was in the metaverse and existed there, it’d be so cool for these kids to just like tap in and visit. It would be cool if we could update it with all our new drops and then they could dress their avatars in them.

What does Rogue in the metaverse look like?

Childhood nostalgia-core bonanza. Foam pits, trampolines everywhere, giant slides into fluffy mattresses. Remember in Princess Diaries 2 when they slid down the slide? Stuff like that. Everything you wanted to do as a kid in one place. Everywhere your parents wouldn’t take you in one place. Disney World. All the best parts of your childhood.

I get so happy thinking about my childhood, thinking back to the times when I had no worries. I think everyone can relate to that in some sort of way. As you get older, it’s amazing, right? We’re growing, and learning more every day. But you’ve got bills to pay and it’s like, “I don’t want to do taxes!” Like, come on! There will be no taxes in Rogue World.

I would love to have a zoo in there. You know, ride the elephants or something. Literally your wildest imagination. The NeverEnding Story is one of my favorite movies of all time, so there’s going to be Falkor in there. Maybe different themed rooms, or zones. There’d be a room [that] anyone could walk into and it’d become their favorite dream. I think cooler than a room would be like a dome. Many different domes, so it doesn’t look like a ceiling.

Like in “Club Penguin.”

I’m more of a Webkinz girl.

I love the way that Gen Z has repurposed and revived Y2K tech. Why is your generation so drawn to those items and aesthetics?

They never experienced it. It’s exciting to them because it was never part of their day-to-day, but maybe they heard their mom talk about it or their brother talk about it. Maybe they saw it in their favorite movie. Those pieces of technology have become ephemeral. [Gen Z] never got to experience that but [they’ll see it on] old online mood boards or certain aesthetic pages on Instagram. In music videos on YouTube [from the 2000s] they held Sidekick phones. [Gen Z] never had that experience. They’re experiencing something they never got to, they’re transporting back in time.

You mentioned mood boards and Instagram accounts dedicated to a particular aesthetic. Where do you find inspiration online?

I like Instagram’s Explore page and Reels a lot to find inspiration and to find new talent — maybe to find emerging brands that we want to have a drop with here [at Rogue]. Or someone we want to collaborate with or a designer I want to commission to design a piece for me in my new collection. Instagram is part of my daily life and also for connecting with people. Sending a DM is the best thing that we could have access to. I posted Diplo on my story yesterday because I was at his concert, and he reposted me and DM’d me back! And I was like, “Perfect, pull up to the shop and we’ll get a fit check.” There’s no limit to what we have access to.

Tech / Technology

Best iPad Pro deal: Get the 6th gen iPad Pro for $109 off

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Get a 2021 iPad Pro (128 GB) for $989.99, which is $109 less than its usual price of $1,099, as of Oct. 27. That’s this iPad Pro’s lowest price ever.
iPad Pro on light blue background with action lines

SAVE $109.01: As of Oct. 27 get the 2022 Apple iPad Pro (128GB) at its lowest price yet at Amazon for $989.99. That’s a discount of 10%.



2022 iPad Pro (128GB)

$989.99 at Amazon (save $100)



Black Friday may not be until mid-November, but we’re already seeing a slew of deals roll in ahead of time. You can save big right now on goodies like smartwatches and tablets, including the iPad Pro. If you’re an avid iOS user, especially if you picked up a new iPhone 15 or Apple Watch Series 9, there’s a lot to love about the iPad, and out of all of the current models, the 2022 iPad Pro is the newest one you can get right now, at least until Apple announces a whole new slate. It’s one of the most premium iPad experiences, so when it’s discounted, you should sit up and pay attention.

As of Oct. 27, the 2022 iPad Pro (128GB, 12.9-inch) is on sale at Amazon for $989.99. That’s $109.01 off its usual price of $1,199 and a savings of 10%. That’s the lowest price we’ve seen yet. Currently, this price only applies to the 128 GB silver model. However, the 256GB configuration is also on sale (in only silver as well) for $1,049.99, which is a discount of $149.01 and a savings of 12%.

This is the best iPad you can get right now, from its powerful M2 processor to its large 12.9-inch display. It’s the perfect companion for a lengthy commute and the best device for helping you wind down in bed at the end of a long day. Thanks to its support for the Apple Pencil, you can also use it to sketch, take notes, or mess about with your favorite apps with a stylus. Pair the iPad Pro with a Magic Keyboard and it suddenly becomes a great alternative to a MacBook Pro. There’s a long list of uses for this tablet, and it’s a great option for just about any user.

So whether you’ve had your eye on an iPad Pro for a while or just needed an excuse to get one, now’s your chance. Lock one in before the holidays are finally here.

Tech / Technology

MotoGP 2023 livestream: How to watch MotoGP for free

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Bypass geo-restrictions to watch MotoGP 2023 for free from anywhere in the world.
Joan Mir of Repsol Honda Team in action during free practice session

TL;DR: Livestream MotoGP for free with ExpressVPN. Unblock free streaming platforms from anywhere in the world with this high-speed VPN.


The F1 gets a lot of media attention, but it also comes with a lot of pit stops, yellow flags, and predictable finishes. If you are looking for electric racing with two wheels instead of four, you should stop what you’re doing and check out MotoGP.

Looking for the best way to watch MotoGP for free? You’ve come to the right place.

What is MotoGP?

Grand Prix motorcycle racing (MotoGP) is the oldest established motorsport world championship, with the inaugural season taking place in 1949. Races last approximately 45 minutes, without pitting for fuel or tires.

The likes of Ducati, Honda, and Yamaha do battle for the constructors’ championship. Francesco Bagnaia and Ducati are the reigning champions.

When is the next MotoGP race?

The 2023 MotoGP season features 20 races held all over the world between March and November:

  1. Grand Prix of Portugal — March 26

  2. Grand Prix of Argentina — April 2

  3. Grand Prix of The Americas — April 16

  4. Grand Prix of Spain — April 30

  5. Grand Prix of France — May 14

  6. Grand Prix of Italy — June 11

  7. Grand Prix of Germany — June 18

  8. TT Assen — June 25

  9. British Grand Prix — Aug. 6

  10. Grand Prix of Austria — Aug. 20

  11. Grand Prix of Catalunya — Sept. 3

  12. Grand Prix of San Marino — Sept. 10

  13. Grand Prix of India — Sept. 24

  14. Grand Prix of Japan — Oct. 1

  15. Grand Prix of Indonesia — Oct. 15

  16. Australian Motorcycle Grand Prix — Oct. 22

  17. Thailand Grand Prix — Oct. 29

  18. Grand Prix of Malaysia — Nov. 12

  19. Grand Prix of Qatar — Nov. 19

  20. Grand Prix of Valencia — Nov. 26

A wide range of streaming services are offering coverage of this MotoGP season, but there is actually no need to pay anything to follow all the action. You can watch MotoGP for free with the help of a VPN.

How to livestream MotoGP for free

The likes of BT Sport, Kayo Sports, and NBC will be showing MotoGP races this season, but none of these options are free. Fortunately, there are free platforms out there that offer an alternative.

Belgium’s RTBF and Austria’s ServusTV will show all of the 2023 MotoGP races free to stream. The catch? You can only access these streaming platforms from Belgium or Austria. That is unless you are using a VPN. With a VPN, you can hide your real IP address and connect to a secure server in another country, meaning you can access streaming services from around the world.

Unblock RTBF and ServusTV by following this quick and easy process:

  1. Sign up for a streaming-friendly VPN (like ExpressVPN)

  2. Download the app to your device of choice (the best VPNs have apps for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, and more)

  3. Open up the app and connect to a server in Belgium or Austria

  4. Connect to RTBF or ServusTV

  5. Watch MotoGP from anywhere in the world


ExpressVPN logo

Credit: ExpressVPN


ExpressVPN (1-Year Subscription + 3 Months Free)

£82.82 only at ExpressVPN (with money-back guarantee)



The best VPNs for streaming are not free, but they do tend to offer money-back guarantees. By using these money-back guarantees, you can watch MotoGP livestreams without fully committing with your cash. This obviously isn’t a long-term solution, but it does mean you can watch individual races without actually spending anything.

And if that seems like too much work, Channel 5 is offering free highlights of all the races.

What is the best VPN for MotoGP?

ExpressVPN is the top choice for unblocking streaming sites, and it offers a generous money-back guarantee. That means you can effectively livestream MotoGP for free with ExpressVPN.

ExpressVPN is tough to beat when it comes to streaming for a number of reasons:

  • Servers in 94 countries

  • Easy-to-use app available on all major devices including iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, and more

  • Strict no-logging policy so your data is secure

  • Impressive streaming speeds without buffering

  • Up to five simultaneous connections

  • 30-day money-back guarantee

A one-year subscription to ExpressVPN is on sale for £82.82 and includes an extra three months for free — 49% off for a limited time. This plan also includes a year of free unlimited cloud backup and a 30-day money-back guarantee. You can sign up to watch MotoGP and then recover your investment when the race weekend is over.

Watch MotoGP for free with ExpressVPN.

Tech / Technology

Mill composter review: The easiest indoor composter, especially if you don’t have a garden

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How do you start composting at home? The trashcan-sized Mill bin answers that question, and is also a solution for what to do with the compost afterward.
Mill composter bin, cardboard box, and cat with hallway and table in background

At-home composting has made serious moves in the past few years.

The most revolutionary was the move indoors. Electric countertop composters like the Vitamix FoodCycler and our beloved Lomi consolidated the composting process (which previously required outdoor space, several months of manual stirring, probably worms, and likely too much patience) to an appliance that doesn’t hog much more counter space than an Instant Pot. Instead of sitting idly and waiting to be emptied like the humble stainless steel countertop food scrap bin, they recycle the food scraps to a dirt-like material in a matter of hours.

Despite these advances in accessibility and simplicity — two major factors necessary to make the average person consider separating food scraps in their kitchen — this approach to countertop composting poses a recurring pickle: what to do with that compost once it’s made. Mill fills the gap.

How does Mill work?

Mill is a large electric indoor composter that sits on the floor like a trash can instead of on the counter. Like other in-home composters, it’s a less-smelly place than the trash to throw plate scrapings, forgotten fridge leftovers, old pet food, and the butt of the bread that everyone keeps bypassing. From there, it breaks down those scraps into a fertilizer that’s kind of like dirt, and it only takes a few hours.

A look inside the Mill compost bin with lid up

A look at the (shiny and new) interior of Mill and its spinning spoons.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

Mill compost bin sitting against wall with hallway and cat in background

Mill is about the size of a 13-gallon trash can, so it does require a good chunk of kitchen floor space.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

But with those basics covered, Mill really starts to pull away from the competition. The most obvious physical difference is that Mill sits on the floor rather than the countertop and is basically like having another full-sized trash can in your kitchen. I love that opening the lid doesn’t require a hand to unscrew — the presser foot opens it for you.

Instead of waiting on you to press a button when the bucket is full like its countertop competitors, Mill automatically starts grinding, churning, and dehydrating whatever you tossed in it that day. You can customize the starting time in the app, and I chose 10 p.m. to try to ensure that everyone in my household was done eating and snacking for the night. The sound of the lid locking was a bit of a jump scare the first few times, but then I literally just started using it to tell time. Oh, Mill just locked? Maybe don’t start a movie right now.

Of course, there have been several instances where somebody has something to put in the Mill after it locks. Conveniently, a recent software update allows you to pause the cycle to unlock the lid by holding the button down. Mill automatically resumes afterward.

Mill compost bin with orange light indicators on lid

Lights on Mill’s lid indicate when it’s locked and running.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

Mill compost bin and cat on hardwood floor with hallway and purple light in background

Oh, to be a cat basking in the faint glow of the Mill bin.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

I actually don’t know exactly how long Mill runs overnight but it’s always done by the time I’m up for work the next morning. It’s also so much quieter than I expected (given the Lomi’s haunted house-esque creaking), producing a low whir that I only really notice when I’m standing near it.

Mill takes almost any food scrap, but not paper or compostable packaging

Mill is super versatile in the variety of food you can put in it. The “yes” list is pretty self-explanatory and easy to remember, but you can get a quick refresher by glancing at the magnet that Mill sends with your bin. Being forced to glance at the magnet every time we open the fridge really helps to normalize separating food scraps in my apartment’s kitchen routine — scraping our plates into Mill is a reflex, just like the automatic reflex to throw a metal can into the recycling bin instead of the trash.

The fact that Mill’s list of what can be composted is heavier on the “yes” side than the “no” side also makes it easier to remember to compost in the first place, especially for the people in the household who aren’t the hardcore eco-friendly ones.

Bucket in Mill composter holding Cheese-Its, a banana peel, an apple core, and pizza crust

A typical day with Mill: Cheez-Its, a banana peel, an apple core, and pizza crust.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

I remember my days of saving food scraps in a bag in my freezer to drop off at my local food scrap collection location in Brooklyn. Having to follow so many rules and Google what was acceptable on such a regular basis was a pain in the ass. “No meat, no dairy or cheese, no fats or oils, no cooked foods.” OK, so do you have to completely trash a salad if it has a few drops of dressing on it? Are steamed vegetables fine or not? Are you not even going to mention grains? Also, nobody knows what the hell carbon-rich or nitrogen-rich materials are. Explain it to me like I’m 5.

Most any food things can be thrown into Mill, and most of the “no” section is composed of non-food items that seem pretty obvious, anyway. The one huge difference is that, while composters like Lomi and compost piles being used for fertilizer can use plant clippings and and paper products like tea bags or napkins, Mill bars these items. It was a bummer at first after the Lomi made me feel like I was sending so much less paper trash to the landfill, but it makes sense when you consider that Mill grounds are being fed to chickens. Remembering that also makes adding meat (like chicken!!!) to Mill feel… morbid, but technically, it’s allowed. Good thing no one in my apartment eats meat anyway.

Fridge door with several magnets including list of food that can be put in composter

Seeing the Mill magnet every time we open the fridge helps to internalize the general list of compostable items.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

Mill app screenshot showing various food items that can be composted

Being able to search super specific items in the app is way easier than Googling.
Credit: Screenshot: Mill

If there’s further confusion about whether something specific can or can’t go in, it’s almost guaranteed to be listed in the Mill app, where you can type in the most random of food items and get a solid yes or no answer. I did this for the less obvious ones, like pet food (if you think wet cat food smells bad in the can, just wait until it’s been chilling in the trash for two days) and mixed-ingredient leftovers like pasta with cheese and sauce.

Mill wants your compost back, so they cover shipping to mail them back

Mill proves how much it really is consolidating your footprint by how long it takes for the bin to fill up. It was a bottomless pit for the first three months I was using it, holding weeks’ worth of daily food scrap dumping from three people and requiring literally no effort on my end. Once the grounds weighed 9 pounds and hit the green line inside, the app let me know it was time to empty.

Mill composter bucket and cardboard box with plastic liner sitting on floor

The Mill bin is removable with handles for easy dumping into the box.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

Cat sniffing box with bag of compost inside

The bag zips, so any smell will be sealed while you wait to add a second batch.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

From there, your only job is to pack your milled results into one of the pre-labeled packages that should have arrived in a separate delivery from the giant Mill box itself. These ship flat, so you’ll have to unfold one and place a planted-based plastic liner in it (also free with your membership). The shipping box can technically hold two full batches and the grounds don’t smell bad at all, so if you have a place to store the half-full box until your bin fills again, you’ll have to mail less often.

After scheduling a USPS pickup or dropping the package off at the post office, your compost is Mill’s problem — and Mill ensures that your food scraps are actually being recycled.

Traditional compost feeds soil. Mill compost feeds chickens.

The way that Mill composts on demand on a daily basis is so cool and so different. But that’s hardly Mill’s sole unprecedented flex. Arguably even more impressive is the fact that Mill is so dedicated to recycling food that it puts your compost directly back into the life cycle — into the belly of a chicken, actually.

The beef that any average Earth enjoyer has with the beef industry is spotlighted by countless documentaries and Impossible Whopper commercials. While cow farming is by far the biggest agricultural hazard for the climate, they’re not the only livestock practice with a hefty carbon footprint. A study about chicken and salmon farming published by Current Biology in February 2023 asserts that much of the emission — as much as 55 percent — associated with poultry farming comes from feeding them.

Factory-farmed chicken feed largely comes from grain and soya. Growing either requires mass amounts of land (often gained through deforestation) and water. The boom of demand for soybean products (ironically, the main base ingredient in a lot of plant-based meat) from humans and now chickens, apparently, is an increasing area of concern on top of the demand for the meat itself.

So, by rerouting your Mill grounds into the hands of farmers as an ingredient for their chicken feed, Mill’s closed-loop service can be thought of as an added measure of sustainability on top of the food scraps it diverts from landfills. According to an interview with NBC, the partnership with farmers also helps to subsidize the membership.

Mill’s mail-in collection and repurposing of the compost you make is the “No garden, no problem,” take that I could imagine a ton of apartment-dwelling Earth stans have been waiting for. Creating nutrient-rich fertilizer at home isn’t exactly a solution if you’re not maintaining any vegetation at home. That was one of my biggest gripes with the Lomi — plus the fact that the setting that works with paper products won’t produce fertilizer that should go into soil at all. Instead, they suggest putting that finished compost in the green bin. You mean, the green bin and curbside composting system that a ton of towns don’t have? Suggesting taking them to a local compost drop-off location kind of defeats the purpose of having a machine to do the composting at home.

How much does Mill cost?

Mill’s pricing diverges from the one-time, upfront payment situation that you’d expect. The bin itself is free, but it won’t ship without your subscription to an annual or monthly Mill service plan. The service plan covers pickups of those pre-labeled food ground packages whenever you want, connection to a support team of real people, plus maintenance like filters, repairs, and even bin replacement.

Here’s how the costs shake out: The cheaper of the two is the annual plan, which will run you $33 per month (billed upfront at $396 annually with free bin delivery) or the monthly plan, which is $45 month to month ($540 for a year) plus a $75 bin delivery. If you go with the annual plan, composting with Mill costs about dollar a day.

Taking all that Mill’s service does while it’s in your kitchen and beyond into account — plus the fact that it’s the only consumer composter on the market that’s doing this — a dollar a day could be totally digestible for anyone with a somewhat disposable budget. If you don’t already pay for trash as part of your current utility bill (like I luckily don’t), you could also think of Mill as claiming that chunk that many others already have to budget for.

No, the loophole you’re thinking of won’t work, either. You can’t simply stop paying for the service while keeping the bin for free. Membership cancellation is only effective once Mill has received your returned bin, which you’ll have 30 days to send back after requesting to cancel your membership.

Mill versus Lomi and Vitamix: Cost is (almost) its only downside

Having Mill in my kitchen has been such a positive, hands-off experience that it hasn’t really sparked any noteworthy complaints. I’d be willing to bet that that’s what everyone will say — until the one-year mark rolls around and several hundred dollars disappear from your bank account again. The whole “dollar a day thing” adds up quickly, especially when you consider that a single year of using Mill is basically as expensive as the full one-time purchase of an indoor countertop composter.

So if you’re interested in composting inside your home but aren’t yet set on the specific machine, your main options aside from Mill are countertop composters like the Lomi, Reencle, or Vitamix FoodCycler. They operate similarly in that they still do the composting inside your home within a matter of hours — they just sit on your countertop and hold a much smaller capacity. These three go for around $400 to $600 at full price, maybe dropping by $100 or so when on sale. Though one of those models might be more expensive than Mill initially, you only have to pay that once.

This isn’t to say that I don’t understand why Mill costs more. It’s providing a wickedly convenient recurring service that no competitors can provide, and you’re paying for the experts to deal with your compost rather than having to figure out what to do with it. I get it, but I’d be remiss not to put it into perspective, especially with steady inflation making us more closely considering what’s a necessity and what’s not.

Mill also sits on the floor while these competitors sit on the counter, and which would work better for you probably depends on the layout of your kitchen and whether you can give up counter space or floor space.

Unlike Lomi, Mill can’t take paper products or plant remnants, such as yard waste or fallen houseplant leaves. You wouldn’t find that appetizing and neither do chickens. However, these slightly stricter guidelines certainly aren’t enough of a drawback to upstage the rest of Mill’s versatility. This is still more range than that of an outdoor composting pile, and landfills have bigger problems than paper and plants, anyway.

In my experience with having both Mill and Lomi in my apartment for several months, Lomi had several maintenance blips that required part replacement. Mill hasn’t glitched once. My guess is a lot of people would be willing to pay more for less upkeep and fewer chats with customer service agents.

Mill versus saving scraps for local pickup or drop-off

FWIW, a ton of people already pay for compost pickup. For instance, one service near me in Philadelphia charges $12 per month for every-other-week pickup, or $18 per month for weekly pickup. Mill’s service cost obviously still surpasses that by a bit, but paying to compost isn’t totally unheard of.

Then, there are the households that definitely want to divert their food scraps from the landfill but can’t decide whether it’s worthwhile to pay for their own composter or just take their scraps to a community compost site.

I just felt a shiver down my spine. Oh, no, I’m not cold — I’m just reflecting on my time saving my food scraps in my last two apartments. The smell that punched me in the face every time I took the lid off of the stainless steel countertop bin or the mystery drop of melty rotten freezer scrap juice that just fell on my foot. Four years of dedication to being a compost girlie means four years of experimenting with different methods of saving food scraps to take somewhere. After all of that, I can confidently confirm that being able to do the whole process in my home has been the easiest, the least gross, and so, so worth it.

Putting a number on Mill’s environmental benefits

I know, know — in a perfect world, a sleek, advanced compost system like Mill would be as standard and accessible in a home as curbside garbage collection is. It seems like we may actually be on the path to that (if you think that’s delusional, let me be delusional). States like California and Vermont haven’t yet awarded each resident and business with a Mill, but they do have statewide mandatory compost laws in place. Cities like San Fransisco and Portland are doing the same with citywide rules, and Brooklyn residents have access to citywide curbside composting as of October 2023. That’s supposed to expand to all of New York City by the end of 2024.

But until then, composting at home with something like Mill is still so impactful, even if you’re the only person you know who has one.

In case you’re blissfully unaware of just how detrimental our food waste habit really is, let’s get into it quickly. It’s estimated that the average American household wastes almost a third of the food it acquires each year, and that’s obviously not counting the contributions of food waste from businesses like restaurants.

When food rots, it produces methane: a gas that’s 80 times more potent than CO2 over a 20-year period after reaching the atmosphere. The combination of households, restaurants, and more creates 170 million metric tons of carbon dioxide-equivalent emissions — equivalent to the exhaust 37 million cars would create.

This is a statistic that Mill is aiming to shrink. One preliminary study done by Mill suggested that a year with Mill can avoid about a half-ton of greenhouse gas emissions at the single household level. Just think of the impact that could be had if Mill achieves its ultimate goal of expanding to the business level.

Is the Mill composter worth it?

Considering I spent my own money to purchase the free test unit I was sent to keep using Mill after I was done testing it, yes, I’d say Mill is worth it. It’s truly in a league of its own in the way that it’s currently the only at-home composter on the market that asks for your compost back to repurpose it. And though that aspect of it may sound a little fancy or obscure, Mill is ridiculously straightforward and easy to use. It’s literally like an extra 13-gallon trash can in your kitchen that takes itself out. Need I circle back to how much less rancid it is to discard food?

Mill simultaneously stirs hope and frustration because it shows just how easy composting at home could and should be. Like seriously, imagine if having a sustainable waste system like this at home was as normalized and accessible as sending everything to the landfill is. To me, it posed the daydream situation of how quickly America could turn its food waste shit show around if composting was funded on the micro level, rather than shifting the responsibility to the average person and whether or not they can figure out a convenient composting solution on their own dime.

Tech / Technology

Save $100 on this iPad refurb

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Get a refurbished 2018 iPad 6 in good condition for just $149, 40% off for minor wear and tear.
mom and child using iPad

TL;DR: As of October 27, get this refurbished iPad 6 for only $149 — that’s 40% off.


Looking for a reliable, budget-friendly tablet you can use for general browsing, streaming, and maybe a little work here and there? This refurbished 6th-gen iPad might be a great fit for a low price. While it’s in stock, this iPad is on sale for $149. 

Refurbished and ready to go

iPads improve every generation, but that doesn’t mean a model with a few years on it isn’t worth your attention. This 2018 tablet has a 9.7-inch Retina display with a 2048×1536 resolution, so you can get a super clear picture whether while you’re browsing or marathoning your favorite series. 

This tablet is equipped with the Apple A10 Fusion chip. It’s not the newest processor, but that plus the 32GB internal storage means you could store a good variety of apps and multitask between them. It also has an 8MP iSight camera for capturing stills, Live Photos, and 1080p 30fps videos. And you can hop onto a video call with the 1.2MP FaceTime HD camera.

If you want to unwind at the end of a long day, you can go online with WiFi or connect to a Bluetooth speaker and play some tunes. This refurbished tablet has a maximum battery life of 10 hours, so you could still have a few hours after the work day before you need to track down a charger. 

A low price doesn’t mean low quality. This tablet only has faint signs of use, with a certified refurbished grade “B”. You might notice some minor scratches or scuffs, but that’s why it’s $100 off. 

Save on a refurbished iPad 6

Why pay for brand-new when ‘new-to-you’ gets the job done?

For a limited time, get a 2018 refurbished iPad 6 on sale for $149 (reg. $250). 

Prices subject to change.