‘Euphoria’ grows up in smart, spectacular Season 2

When Euphoria premiered in 2019, Sam Levinson’s dark portrait of modern adolescence shocked audiences. The Emmy-winning HBO drama wasn’t wholly reduced to on-screen penis tallies, but the series’ toxically cool material made it notoriously controversial. Levinson’s no-holds-barred approach to drugs, sex, and violence, paired with Euphoria‘s super popular costume and makeup aesthetic, worried critics who felt it glorified dangerous behavior for teens. Fans argued it was precisely that rebelliousness that made Euphoria‘s oozing angst exceptional.

Then, against the backdrop of the 2020-2021 holiday season, Levinson released two Euphoria specials that were notably tamer. The restrictions of the pandemic made the dialogue-heavy episodes smaller in scope and more intellectually complex. Each focused on main characters Rue (Zendaya) and Jules (Hunter Schafer) in a Marriage Story-esque narrative that finally got into the guts of the star couple’s tumultuous romance and innate incompatibilities through lengthy, intimate scenes. The specials were cozier and sadder than anything we’d seen from the show or Levinson before.


Two years into a global crisis, “Euphoria” feels remarkably grown up in its broadening of traditional teen narratives for an audience permeated by insecurity and fear at all ages. 

It is from these dueling phases of Euphoria that its triumphant second season emerges at the start of 2022. The seven episodes provided to critics (there will be eight in total, released week to week) are as stupefyingly bold as any of Season 1. But in Season 2, Euphoria‘s flagrant disregard for mainstream acceptability is elevated by an earned confidence in Levinson’s writing and direction, making the series’ ballsy bluster feel better justified. If previous episodes left you wondering what the kids of East Highland High School were being put through all this emotional, psychological, and even physical hell “for,” these new installments defend and deepen the meaning of that suffering expertly.

Maybe I’m projecting. But two years into a global crisis, Euphoria feels remarkably grown up in its broadening of traditional teen narratives for an audience permeated by insecurity and fear at all ages. 

Dominic Fike as Elliot.

Dominic Fike as Elliot.
Credit: HBO

Levinson achieves this growth, at least in part, by incorporating more adult characters, highlighting the downward spiral of Nate’s father Cal (Eric Dane), relentless optimism of Rue’s mother Leslie (Nika King), and quiet alcoholism of Lexi and Cassie’s mother Suze (Alanna Ubach). As the parents of Euphoria lose control of themselves — having lost any control of their children during, or long before, the events of Season 1 — the sense that this entire community is hurtling into chaos grows stronger. This show has always been about a feeling of panicked helplessness, the sort of intangible anxiety you never really age out of, and this season every character exhibits that tortured state of mind at one point or another. 

SEE ALSO:

The most anticipated TV shows coming in 2022

The plot mirrors this emotional precariousness through an unpredictability that pairs enormous suspense with hyper-articulate character work. As with real teenagers, the time between revelation and reaction is lightning quick. At the end of the breakneck premiere, a miscalculation from Nate (Jacob Elordi) and a meltdown from Cassie (Sydney Sweeney) kicks off a season-long saga with Maddy (Alexa Demie) that never lets up. Simultaneously, Rue’s addiction drives her further into dysfunction and deception as she reassesses her relationship with Jules and befriends newcomer Elliot (Dominic Fike). (This culminates in the best hour the series has ever seen, by the way.)

In the periphery, Lexi (Maude Apatow) and Fezco (Angus Cloud) find an unlikely connection, even as Fezco’s illegal business with his brother Ashtray (Javon Walton) grows more dangerous through a host of new characters.

Sydney Sweeney as Cassie.

Sydney Sweeney as Cassie.
Credit: HBO

Occasional wisdom is offered by Rue’s sponsor Ali (Colman Domingo) and the wealthy mother of a kid Maddy babysits (Minka Kelly). But for the most part, Euphoria makes its second outing stick by letting the action fly and leaving the audience to watch its cataclysmic consequences. The fallout is less predictable than last season — no one gets pregnant, for example — but it’s still Levinson’s expert rendering of all-consuming emotion that makes these various storylines, touching on a dozen different corners of life, work as a coherent whole. 

That doesn’t make for an especially relaxing Sunday night show — though the nail-biting agony is eased by Levinson’s blending of reality and fantasy. The series’ characteristically trippy sequences return this time around with a second classroom lecture from Rue, a Martin Scorsese homage with Fezco, a Lexi stage play episode, and more. If it can be said that Levinson ever loses his way, then it is in some — but not many — of these reality-bending moments. There are those that are spectacular, but there are others that feel superfluous, bordering on hammy. Kat (Barbie Ferreira) suffers especially. Her provocative online sex work plotline from Season 1 morphs into a snooze-worthy drama with her boyfriend Ethan (Austin Abrams) that culminates in some fantasy sequences, including a dated Game of Thrones reference, that made me cringe.

Angus Cloud as Fezco.

Angus Cloud as Fezco.
Credit: HBO

Still, Euphoria‘s intoxicating blend of striking music, visuals, and supercharged feeling makes for a dream-like watch. From intimate betrayals to public humiliations, the agony of these newest episodes channel existential themes beyond the outrage of one generation; and Levinson delivers them in enough style to make the discomfort of that broad, cynical thesis bearable. Not to mention, Zendaya is at a career-best with a performance so dazzling they might as well engrave her trophies now.

Over the next eight weeks, you can expect a steady trickle of obsession-worthy television reaching new heights in its sophomore season. That said, waiting until it’s out might be smart. Euphoria Season 2 is an electrifying ride you won’t want to wait for.

Euphoria Season 2 premieres Jan. 9 at 9 p.m. ET on HBO Max.

Watch high-speed autonomous race cars go head-to-head on the track

The annual CES technology conference closed out at more than 170 mph on Friday with the Indy Autonomous Challenge.

The autonomous race car competition came to the Las Vegas Motor Speedway with five teams from seven universities racing self-driving cars for the first place title and $150,000.

Team PoliMOVE from Politecnico di Milano in Italy and the University of Alabama beat out Team TUM Autonomous Motorsport from the Technische Universität München in Germany in the final head-to-head race.

The race was close with Team TUM spinning out at the end. But TUM couldn’t catch up from behind nor keep up with PoliMOVE’s record speed of 173 mph.

TUM had won the original race in October at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Like at the October race, every team at CES competed with the same Dallara AV-21 race car outfitted with top-of-the-line sensor equipment including LiDAR from sensor maker Luminar for measuring distance with lasers.

More clips from the race are on Twitch and YouTube.

Best custom keyboards to add to your iPhone

Your iPhone background and lock screen aren’t the only things you can customize on the Apple handset.

The digital keyboard you use for typing can transform from the drab QWERTY layout into a portal for typing in French, Chinese, Portuguese, and most of the world’s languages. You can also use the keyboard to spice up your texting with GIFs, emoji, memes, and stickers. Other custom keyboards change the layout of the keys or how you type.

Let’s explore how to take your typing beyond the standard, default keyboard.

Languages

The easiest way to change up your keyboard is to add more language options. For an iPhone follow these steps to add as many options as you’d like.

  • Open Settings and find General

  • Within General you’ll see “Keyboards”

  • Click on that and you’ll see all the keyboards already loaded

  • At the bottom of the list click “Add New Keyboard”

  • From there you can scroll through or search through all available languages (it’s a long list from Ainu to Welsh)

    How to open keyboard settings

    Add a new keyboard on the bottom.
    Credit: Sasha Lekach / Mashable

    List of languages

    And make a selection from a long list of language options.
    Credit: Sasha Lekach / Mashable

Layouts

A bevy of apps let you redesign your keyboard.

Typewise arranges the keys into an easier-to-type honeycomb shape, while apps like Microsoft’s SwiftKey let you type by swiping from key to key (a feature iOS has since adopted) and use a different text prediction tool.

Person holding a smartphone.

Hexagons for better typing.
Credit: Typewise

KeyPro gives you fonts and skins for a more colorful keyboard arrangement, as do other apps like iKeyboard and Kika Keyboard.

KeyPro description of app.

Get creative.
Credit: Screenshot: Apple App Store

Fun stuff

If you want easy access to GIFs and memes, you can download different keyboard apps to do just that.

Google’s Gboard is known for being the ultimate keyboard alternative. You can search for GIFs, emoji, photos, even restaurants and other locations and put those directly into your text.

Gboard description on App Store.

Search Google right on your keyboard.
Credit: Screenshot: Apple App Store

The straight-forward GIF Keyboard is made just for searching for GIFs from GIF site Tenor, since who needs words if there isn’t an image?

Grammarly even has a keyboard to keep typos and poor grammar out of your texts.

App store description of the Grammarly keyboard.

A grammar keyboard? Yes.
Credit: Screenshot: Apple App Store

There’s something for everyone.

What is an AirTag?

There are two kinds of people in this world: People who have been late to an event because they cannot find their keys or wallet or purse, and people who are liars.

Apple’s AirTag, a tracking device released on April 30, 2021, set out to fix that first group’s problem. Designed to act as a key finder, the tool can also be slapped on an animals’ collar, tucked into a bag, or, yes, even attached to a car or a person. 

But what actually is an AirTag? 

Apple AirTags are built for your keychain — each unit is 1.26 inches in diameter, which is about twice the size of a quarter. Starting at $29, the water-resistant tool uses Apple’s Find My network and Bluetooth signals to connect your phone with the tag and guide you to your misplaced item. It’s compatible with any iPhone, iPad, or iPod Touch device capable of running iOS and iPadOS 14.5 or later. If you’re familiar with other Bluetooth trackers, like Tile or Chipolo, the Apple ones work pretty much the same way.

Is it customizable?

Like most Apple products, the AirTag is customizable. You can get them individually or in a four-pack, and the only thing you can do specifically to the product itself is to engrave it, which is free. But that metal circle will need an attachment if you want to hook it to a keychain or a pet’s collar — in its most basic form, an AirTag really only works to slip into your wallet or purse.

You can get seven different colors of leather key rings, five different colors of a leather loop, or four different colors of the classic loop. If you venture outside of Apple, there are tons of AirTag accessories you can get elsewhere, including Belkin, Otterbox, Amazon, and Neiman Marcus. Apple also has a collaboration with Hermès, if you’re down to drop a few hundred dollars.

How do I use it?

Connect your AirTag with your Apple hardware by following the steps outlined in the Find My section of your device. Once you’re all set up, attach the AirTag to whatever you lose most (keys, wallet, TV remote). Now, if you misplace your item, you can either go to your Find My app or, if you use voice-activated features, say “Hey Siri, find my keys.” The AirTag will play a sound, and you can follow it to your missing item. Your phone can also lead you to it with “precision finding,” which will point you toward your AirTag with a compass-like arrow.

If your item isn’t nearby — like you left your wallet in an Uber or your keys at a friends’ house — you can put your AirTag into lost mode. That way, when it’s detected by an in-network device, you’ll get a notification about its location.

What about privacy

AirTags, or any digital trackers, naturally bring up plenty of privacy concerns. Apple reports that the entire online process of using an AirTag is anonymous and encrypted: You’re the only person who can see where your AirTag is, and your location data and history aren’t stored on the AirTag itself, meaning that even Apple doesn’t know the location of your device.

That opens into the whole concern about unwanted tracking. Theoretically, you could absolutely drop an AirTag into someone’s backpack or slip it onto someone’s car to track them. But there are a few safety features put in place that can potentially keep unwanted tracking at bay. If someone else’s AirTag is in your vicinity and traveling around with you, your phone will notice it and send you an alert. And if you can’t find where it’s hiding, the AirTag will play a noise to help you. Those alerts only get sent if the device is separated from its owner.

SEE ALSO:

If you find an unwanted AirTag, here’s how to disable it

Do you like scary movies? Where to watch every ‘Scream’ before ‘Scream 5’ hits theaters

There are certain rules that one must abide by in order to successfully survive a Scream sequel. For instance, number one: You must stream the original and the other sequels ASAP.

Set 25 years after the events of Scream (1996), the perplexingly named Scream (2022) is poised to reignite one of horror’s most frightening franchises on Jan. 14. It will feature the Woodsboro homecomings of series favorites Neve Campbell, David Arquette, and Courteney Cox, as well as a cast of new characters unwittingly victimized by a fresh Ghostface.

To fully appreciate the journey ahead, eager audiences should plan to set aside roughly eight hours to binge the first four Scream movies. The first two are groundbreaking slashers that helped repopularize the horror genre after it waned in popularity during the late ’80s. Their tongue-in-cheek approach helped define satirization and criticism of the horror genre for years to come, even if Scream 3 and Scream 4 weren’t quite as good.

Listed in chronological order with some franchise history to boot, here’s every Scream movie and where to watch them. Happy haunting!

1. Scream (1996)

Drew Barrymore in 'Scream' (1996).

Casey Becker, an all-time ‘Scream’ queen.
Credit: Miramax

Any horror fan worth their Shudder subscription will tell you Scream (1996) changed the game. But there’s more to this slasher’s modern sales pitch than just saying, “It’s important.”

Directed by Wes Craven and written by Kevin Williamson, this whip-smart whodunnit is unflinchingly fun and freaky with a killer cast, script, and style that haven’t lost their collective edge yet. It’s widely considered one of the most unimpeachably re-watchable scary movies ever made. Plus, it cleverly references half a dozen other legendary genre titles, giving those who watch a taste of horror’s best and worst instincts in less than two hours.

Neve Campbell stars as Sidney Prescott, a likable final girl-type navigating a sinister murder plot. When a masked figure with a fondness for horror movies starts attacking suburbanites in a southern California town, Sidney and more of Woodsboro’s residents must fight to survive a night against their mysterious foe. But even Sidney and her friends’ very meta knowledge of horror movie survival can’t save all of them from the villain known as “Ghostface.”

This all-star cast includes Matthew Lillard, Rose McGowan, Skeet Ulrich, Jamie Kennedy, Drew Barrymore, and more ’90s icons. It also introduces franchise favorites David Arquette as rookie cop Dewey Riley and Courteney Cox as crime reporter Gale Weathers. If you’re going to watch just one movie ahead of Scream (2022), then it really ought to be this one.

How to watch: Scream (1996) is streaming with Peacock Premium, and is available for rent/purchase on Amazon Prime Video, Google Play, Apple TV, YouTube, and other digital platforms.

2. Scream 2 (1997)

Scene from 'Scream 2'.

Knife through a door! That’s a ‘Scream’ classic.
Credit: Miramax

Horror expert Randy Meeks may have warned audiences to never say they’d “be right back” in Scream (1996). But the franchise itself made a speedy return with a sequel from Craven and Williamson featuring all of the original’s surviving characters less than a year later.

Scream 2 follows Sidney Prescott to a college in Ohio, where the infamy of her face-off with what turned out to be not one but two Ghostfaces still haunts her. Not only has her ordeal from the original been made into another monosyllabic horror movie series, hysterically named Stab; but an unsolved double homicide at a nearby theater has local police and Gale Weathers thinking copycat killer.

When Dewey arrives on campus to check on Sidney, it’s clear we’re in for another harrowing Ghostface encounter. But it’s how the characters played by Scream newcomers Jerry O’Connell, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Laurie Metcalf, Elise Neal, Timothy Olyphant, Jada Pinkett Smith, and more fare against this new enemy that makes up the meat of the movie.

With a bigger budget and sequels to satirize, Scream 2 delivers everything the first one did well and then some. It’s a bit of a toss up to say which one is better, but you can safely assume that Scream 2 is more violent and more confident in its humor.

How to watch: Scream 2 is streaming with Peacock Premium, and is available for rent/purchase on Amazon Prime Video, Google Play, Apple TV, YouTube, and other digital platforms.

3. Scream 3 (2000)

Neve Campbell in 'Scream 3'.

Here we Sidney Prescott, spending way too much screen time running around a fancy house.
Credit: Miramax

Scream 3 is generally regarded as the series’ low point and with good reason.

Craven returned to direct the third — and, for more than a decade, final — installment in his previously masterful franchise. So many fans placed blame for its bloated story and weighed down pacing on screenwriter Ehren Kruger, who took over for Williamson on this film only. But more than a mediocre plot, Scream 3 lacks the conviction of its predecessors. It doesn’t honor the smarts or successes of the franchise up to that point, fails to exhibit the knowing guidance Craven imbued in the first Scream sequel, and just generally can’t seem to decide what it’s doing. That said, it’s canon.

Back in California, Scream 3 catches up with Sidney who has become a recluse. But her story is tangential to a spree of murders in Hollywood, many of them on the set of the upcoming Stab 3. Wearing the Ghostface disguise and using an impossible voice changer that mimics anyone the user wants (that technology doesn’t exist now, let alone back then), the third antagonist of Scream starts in on a boring slog of mundane kills, tiring chase sequences, and needless retconning that’s just super sloppy.

It’s understandable. Scream 3 had a tortured production, impacted by the national conversation around violent media following the Columbine High School shooting. Still, there are moments in it that are fun in an aughts nostalgia sort of way. Plus, it’s heavy on the comedy and does give us more screen time with Sidney, Dewey, and Gale.

How to watch: Scream 3 is streaming with Starz; and is available for rent/purchase on Amazon Prime Video, Google Play, Apple TV, YouTube, and other digital platforms.

4. Scream 4 (2011)

Emma Roberts in 'Scream 4'.

JILL. The killer is *right* THERE!!
Credit: Miramax

Reuniting with Craven for the director’s last film before his passing in 2015, original Scream screenwriter Williamson returns for the franchise’s fourth outing. The result is a perfectly passable flick that doesn’t live up to the greatness of the first two, but is worlds better than Scream 3.

At the start, Sidney is being framed for the murders of numerous Woodsboro teens. Meanwhile, her cousin Jill (Emma Roberts) and Jill’s classmates (Hayden Panettiere, Nico Tortorella, Marielle Jaffe, Rory Culkin, Erik Knudsen, Britt Robertson, Aimee Teegarden) are dodging the real killer.

Scream 4 is stuffed with red herrings and meta jokes about true crime obsessives and scary movies re-made to death. It’s just as packed with kills and gore, bringing Scream into a new era of terror. Alison Brie, Adam Brody, Marley Shelton, Mary McDonnell, and Anthony Anderson appear in small parts. But it’s once again the original characters’ show, with Sidney, Dewey, and Gale stealing focus throughout. (Seriously, Dewey and Gale are married in this one and it’s very fun.)

You’ll like this sequel if you’ve liked the others, but only watching Scream 4 ahead of Scream (2022) likely doesn’t make practical sense. So get to this one last.

How to watch: Scream 4 is streaming with Showtime; and is available for rent/purchase on Amazon Prime Video, Google Play, Apple TV, YouTube, and other digital platforms.

5. Scream (2022)

Jenna Ortega in 'Scream' (2022).

Good luck, girl.
Credit: Miramax

Helmed by Ready or Not co-directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, and written by James Vanderbilt and Guy Busick, this movie should probably be called Scream 5. But it’s not and here we are, confused but excited.

Early reactions to Scream (2022) have been good, but we still don’t know a lot about what seems like a pseudo-reboot. The official synopsis reads: Twenty-five years after a streak of brutal murders shocked the quiet town of Woodsboro, a new killer has donned the Ghostface mask and begins targeting a group of teenagers to resurrect secrets from the town’s deadly past.”

That’s pretty boilerplate. But from the trailer, we know the next Ghostface’s victims are related to players in the original crime. So we can start sussing out how we think first-time Scream actors Melissa Barrera, Mason Gooding, Jenna Ortega, Jack Quaid, Dylan Minnette, Jasmin Savoy Brown, and more fit into that puzzle. Less easy to guess at is whether this will be an overdue finale for the Scream series, or the start of something new. With Sidney, Dewey, and Gale also back again, anything could happen.

How to watch: Scream (2022) is only in theaters Jan. 14; streaming availability has yet to be announced.

Bonus: Scream: The TV Series

If you can’t make it to the theaters to see Scream (2022) yet, then you can take solace in knowing there’s probably some Scream stuff you haven’t seen that’s already streaming.

MTV’s Scream: The TV Series is a surprisingly fun spinoff from the films that doesn’t include any characters we know but does make ample use of the franchise’s fantastic formula. Seasons 1 and 2 are connected, but Season 3 is totally separate. With 30 episodes to its name, there are plenty of kills and in-jokes you’ll enjoy, even if you’re only passing time before Scream (2022) goes digital.

How to watch: Scream: The TV Series is streaming on Netflix.

Here’s all the revolutionary, innovative, and wacky tech from CES 2022

Another year, another CES draws to a close. But this year, everything was a tad… eerier. 

The famously crowded Consumer Electronics Show returned to Las Vegas for 2022, hoping to reunite tech enthusiasts in shoulder-to-shoulder showrooms for in-person demos and keynotes. Alas, amidst the ongoing pandemic and the latest Omicron surge, many publications and companies chose to stay home and tune in virtually. 

The resulting hybrid event featured many empty showroom floors. But worry not! The tech companies still had plenty to show off to audiences, both virtually and in person. From new work-from-home gadgets to giant robot overlords, here’s the best of everything that happened at CES 2022.

Pandemic life tech

A black face mask with multi-colored light strips and air vents on the side.

It’s giving major sci-fi movie vibes.
Credit: Razer

As the pandemic rages on, so does pandemic-era tech. 

Omicron is forcing many to reckon with the quality of their everyday masks, but if you want a mask that offers both protection and a party, Razer has you covered.

After showing a concept dubbed Project Hazel at CES 2021, the company debuted a base model and Pro version of its Zephyr mask this year. The masks feature two-way air filters and fans, plus customizable, colorful lights via a connected app and voice amplification. You get Covid safety and a rave for your face. What’s not to love? 

A person standing next to a mirror-like screen, communicating with another person in the screen.

Oh good, now my coworkers can see my entire home!
Credit: la Vitre

And for those looking to spice up their work-from-home setup, la Vitre invites you to completely eliminate your home privacy. It’s a fullscreen video portal that connects you with your coworkers – because, ya know, Zoom isn’t enough. You knock on the screen like you would an office door, and a coworker can step into view to answer the call.

The worst part? It’s constantly on, albeit blurred for privacy if needed. Who needs work-life balance anyways?! 

Self-care upgrades

A wand-like device in two pieces sitting inside a wooden drawer.

This could be the secret to never going to a salon again.
Credit: L’Oreal

Despite various world disasters, or perhaps because of it, plenty of tech at CES 2022 showcased ways to really treat yourself. 

On the everyday people side of things, L’Oreal launched the Colorsonic, an at-home hair dye wand that promises to make coloring your hair as seamless as just brushing it.

A black monitor screen with a bathtub icon and a temperature reading of 101 degrees.

Admit it, having the perfect bath temperature every time kinda sounds amazing.
Credit: Kohler

On the uber-rich people side of things, Kohler debuted the PerfectFill drain kit system, which promises to preset your bath’s temperature and depth for an impeccable soak, every time. You can even start the bath via voice command on the Kohler app, all for the price of $2,700 (plus the cost of a Kohler tub and spout.) 

Who needs headphones? 

Dark gray soundbar set against gray background.

This somehow delivers sound to only your ears.
Credit: Noveto

Headphones are constantly being updated across every audio brand, but what if you could have the private listening experience of headphones without actually wearing any? 

Noveto debuted this “soundbar,” called the N1, at CES, and it supposedly transmits ultrasound through the air to place it near your ears without bothering anyone nearby. It also has face-tracking tech to sync with any movement you make, and to be honest it all sounds too good to be true. It’s slated to debut later this year, so we’ll be keeping an eye out. 

Car tech 

Gray car with roof and door open to reveal no steering wheel and two plush seats.

No steering wheel, no responsibilities.
Credit: Cadillac

CES is consistently filled with new auto ideas and accessories, but some definitely garner more excitement than others. 

On the unrealistic-yet-deeply-cool side, Cadillac added to its autonomous car lineup with the InnerSpace concept, a luxury two-seater electric vehicle with no steering wheel. Truly a car for no thoughts, just vibes.

Two pieces of a black car dash cam monitors against a black background.

Sleek and modern.
Credit: Nextbase

For those who want a car gadget they could actually use in their existing, less cool cars, Nextbase also released the iQ. It’s a dashcam outfitted with three cameras and accident-tracking tech packed into an aesthetically pleasing body. 

Robot takeover 

A woman laying on a massage bed while a giant robot works on her back.

Try not to think about getting crushed while being massaged.
Credit: Massage Robotics

We all know the robot revolution is imminent, but we didn’t see it being so… relaxing. 

Massage Robotics launched its flagship bot at CES, and it just so happens to be a 7-foot-tall gargantuan with two arms to massage out your knots. It can understand verbal commands, communicate data with a neural network, and will only run you $310,000 – much more affordable than a regular ol’ human massage! 

The future of farming 

Green John Deere tractor facing front.

No driver needed.
Credit: John Deere

If you’ve always dreamed of running away and becoming a farmer but feared your inability to drive a tractor, fret no more. 

John Deere debuted its updated autonomous tractor, and it can definitely drive itself. It has six pairs of stereo cameras for 360-degree obstacle detection, and it uses a deep neural network to determine its movements. If you still don’t quite trust self-driving tractors, you can also monitor it via phone with access to live video, images, data, and metrics to adjust elements like speed and depth.  

Wagz Tagz are like AirTags for keeping your dog off the couch

Keeping your dog out of the garbage just got way easier.

At CES 2022, the pet company Wagz debuted Wagz Tagz, a small device that works with the Wagz smart collar to keep your dog away from off-limit zones in your home. The tag is a little smaller than a credit card and slips into areas like under a mattress, in-between couch cushions, or yes, attached to your garbage can.

Wagz is one of several pet-focused companies at this year’s CES that have found an enthusiastic market recently. Nearly half of Americans reported getting a dog during the pandemic, and as of 2020, pet tech sales generated $5.5 billion worldwide. As owners spend more time at home, it’s no coincidence that the human and dog bond is closer than ever.

Image of hand slipping Wagz Tagz in-between couch cushions

Slip the tag in-between couch cushions to keep your dog at bay.
Credit: Wagz

To set up Wagz Tagz, place the tag in a spot your dog sneaks into or onto. Using the Wagz app, set up the geofencing around this zone, which can be anywhere from three to 15 feet. Then pair it with the Wagz collar.

If your dog enters an off-limits zone, the collar gives them a “shock-free correction,” which is a combination of vibration, audible cues, and ultrasonic sounds. This correction “will capture the dog’s attention” enough to distract them from the behavior, according to a spokesperson. You’ll also receive a notification from the app when this happens.

A UC Davis study from last year connected sudden household sounds to anxiety in dogs, so it’s probably a good idea to watch your dog carefully for signs of stress if you use this product.

And of course, using Wagz Tagz isn’t a replacement for training. “As with all corrections,” said a Wagz spokesperson, “training is required for the dog to understand what to do upon experiencing this.” But it’s a convenient way to start addressing a problem that beleaguers many dog owners.

Wagz Tagz will be available for purchase in March 2022 and sell for $39.99 and $99.99 for a pack of three.

Modsy’s online interior design is aggressively fine

I’m writing this review in what is, essentially, a storage locker with windows, high ceilings, and a parquet floor. My plastic work table from Home Depot — ahem, my desk — has been mostly sufficient for my needs since June, when my spouse purchased it because we clearly needed something to work on. I tried to talk him out of it.

I finally hit a wall in October and acknowledged the obvious: The room isn’t functional, let alone pleasant to spend time in. As a recovering perfectionist, furnishing my apartment has always been a slog, especially if it’s a room that’s important to me (I’m a wizard with the insides of closets). Since I live with another person who finds bare walls and books stacked on the floor for years untenable, I suggested we try another path. I love to scroll Instagram as much as the next person, but coming up with a coherent design for a functional, beautiful office on a budget while working full-time just wasn’t going to get accomplished in the near future. We briefly considered hiring an interior designer, but assumed the cost would be too high. Then, a friend recommended an online interior design service.

These services, which come from a cadre of companies like Havenly, Modsy, and Spacejoy, are an example of would-be decorating disruptors taking an IRL service into the cloud. Buoyed by cheap and ubiquitous rendering software and arbitraging wages across the globe, the companies promise to design your space and let you buy your furniture with ease — for a small commission, of course, on top of the flat fee, which runs from $150 to $500 depending on the package level. A traditional interior designer in the U.S. charges an average of $100 an hour plus a furniture commission, so the online services are often much cheaper.


The assignment: Help me transform my home office into somewhere I’d actually enjoy working.

I gave two design services — Havenly and Modsy —the same assignment: Help me transform my home office from a storage unit with a fold-out table into somewhere I’d actually enjoy working (and walking by another 30 times a day).

In the end, the experiences showed the strengths and weaknesses of these types of companies, and the limits of technology in making things easier. You can see a head-to-head comparison here.

You can start your Modsy journey with a style quiz.

You can start your Modsy journey with a style quiz.
Credit: mashable via modsy

Getting started with Modsy

On Modsy’s website, you start by clicking the maroon “Start Your Project” button in the upper right hand corner and choose the room you’d like to design, from living room to nursery to office (and more). The next question asks about your motivation for the (re)design. Are you moving or redecorating? (This inquiry feels like a cross between mildly useful and market research.) Subsequently, you’ll choose how “finished” the space is. Basically, do you need to buy everything, or only a few pieces?

At this point, you’ll hit a paywall and need to choose a package.

How much does Modsy cost?

Modsy’s pricing starts at $159 for a Premium-level single-room package. There’s also a Luxe level ($499 per room), which includes unlimited video calls with your designer, special discounts, and the ability to change flooring or create renderings from blueprints. Both packages include 3D room designs, furniture discounts, and unlimited design revisions. There’s a third, multi-room option as well. I went with the lowest-priced Premium package.

In addition, there are discounts when you buy your furniture through Modsy, similar to the commission structure of pre-internet interior design. Overall, I didn’t notice Modsy’s prices to be cheaper than buying directly from a vendor, though there were several coupons on offer via a banner on the site. I would expect that Modsy can take advantage of trade discounts, so I’m a little surprised there isn’t a built-in cost savings on the furniture (perhaps there is for some brands). Modsy also promises to automatically price-match any sale you find on a manufacturer’s website, but I haven’t tested it.

Sales don’t always include the items that were used in your room design, though I did receive an email when one of the pieces in my room designs went on sale. However, I can see which items are on sale when I open the shoppable room renderings.

The first step in any project after you buy a design package with Modsy is to create a room profile, a process that took about 20 minutes. The site takes you through a range of questions, asking about your budget, color palette, needs for the space, and the results of your style quiz, which you can take before starting or after paying for your room package to hone in on what rooms you like. Some of the room profile questions seemed forced to create opportunities for more purchasing. For example, I had to choose one add-on feature for our office (I picked a reading nook), but none of the options were that interesting or really what I needed (a craft area for my kids). Choosing only one color palette also felt limiting, since it was hard to know exactly how that would translate into a final design and what it would dictate in the process.

Modsy’s style quiz

The website gives you a selection of 16 spacious living and dining areas to choose from; you pick your top three. If you don’t live in a large house with lots of natural light from big windows, you might have to do some imagining to translate these styles to your particular abode. But half the fun is dreaming about a “perfect home.” There is no clutter or children’s toys in any of the inspiration images, which aren’t connected to your particular project. As I was designing an office, it was a little frustrating not to see any actual office spaces in the style quiz.


“You’re drawn to vintage and eclectic spaces,” my first top-three room declared.

Each of those three initial choices is presented as a design subtype that you explore in more detail by evaluating the furniture and items in the rooms. “You’re drawn to vintage and eclectic spaces,” my first top-three room declared. It was followed by a grid of furnishings for me to favorite or skip. I repeated that process for “Scandinavian modern spaces” and “industrial and urban spaces,” helping the algorithm hone in on my tastes in chairs, couches, lamps, and art. That “urban spaces” is somehow a design sub-category feels like a red flag.

Finally, the quiz asks whether you’re actively working on a project. You have to enter an email address to get your results. It’s a canny, irritating move after you’ve come so far — are you really going to not provide your email? Rest assured, the email capture won’t go to waste: In the 22 days since I first signed up with Modsy, I’ve received 27 emails from the company, 15 of which were about my order and project, and the rest of which were marketing emails and sales notices. The Style Quiz results, in comparison, were underwhelming: two sentences of description and then a call-to-action with a discount to purchase a package.

What’s the Modsy design process?

Online interior design services like Modsy and Havenly (which we also reviewed, and have a comparison of the two) have a clearcut promise: You submit information about your space, you’re matched with a designer, and then renderings are created, from which you can shop the items. However, this is a streamlined version of the process, which varies slightly between the services with regard to the order of operations and level of detail.

With Modsy, after filling out the room profile, I had to scan my current space with my phone using the company’s app, which is downloadable for free. I walked around in a circle, keeping the phone level and pointed across the room. Clutter (of which there was a lot) was fine to keep in view. The scan helped create the later 3D rendering, which faithfully recreated our floors, windows, and door. It also took the relevant measurements of the space.

Modsy assigns you a designer based on your style, project, and pricing tier. (Luxe customers get access to more experienced designers.) I ordered my design package and submitted my information on November 1, and the service told me I’d get my 3D renderings on the 17th, which seemed like a big delay. However, the process has a lot of intermediary steps — phone calls, layout options, initial designs — that might explain that lag and could be better spelled out.


Pro tip: Get your Pinterest board ready before you sign up.

My designer emailed me within 24 hours to schedule a project call, which took place a day later. During the 15-minute session, my spouse and I discussed with her what we wanted out of the space (two workstations) and to drill down on our tastes and budget. If you have a partner whose preferences you are taking into account, I highly recommend doing this exercise together. One of the biggest difficulties my spouse and I had when thinking about furnishing the office was finding a design and style that suited us both. Speaking with a designer and leaving it in her hands was very helpful, and one of the big reasons we decided to try the service at all. Modsy’s process was also confusing, with decisions about layouts, and then initial designs to review. Having a designer to walk us through it was really helpful.

An initial layout from our Modsy designer

An initial layout from our Modsy designer
Credit: mashable via modsy

Pro tip: Get your Pinterest board ready before you sign up. We submitted more photos of items we wanted to repurpose in the room and some links to inspiration images. If you have pre-existing items, Modsy will include those exact items in the renderings for a fee, or similar alternates for free.

Roughly two days later, an email alert told us it was time to choose a layout. Through Modsy’s website we were presented with two layouts for the space, which included stand-in furniture and the reading nook, and some background context from the designer. We had 72 hours to make a selection, at which point our designer would have moved ahead with her preferred layout (which was the one we chose anyway).

We were able to give feedback on the layout (e.g., change a bookcase to open wall shelving) that was incorporated into the subsequent design. There’s a good feeling of momentum with Modsy, moving from one step to the next. Getting the layouts was exciting, and I could really start to envision the space.

One of two initial designs for a home office from a Modsy designer.

One of two initial designs for a home office from a Modsy designer.
Credit: mashable via modsy

Reviewing Modsy’s designs

A few days after we submitted our layout, we received two designs. These were 3D renderings of the space, and rendered images with shoppable products. But each room had a slightly different vibe.

The desks, consoles, and reading nook chairs were all different. One of the designs seemed to be at a lower price point overall; nearly every item was cheaper than its counterpart in the other design. The pieces were generally in mid-range West Elm or Crate & Barrel level, $400 to $1100 an item. You can choose a pricing level for individual pieces when creating a room profile.

One of Modsy’s very cool features is the ability to swap out pieces using their “Live Swap” tool. You can click on an item and see suggested or similar alternates, and then the rendering engine will replace it in your mock-up and save it as a new design. The tool is both powerful and finicky. In one instance, I tried to replace a set of sideboards with another set that I didn’t realize were longer. Instead of moving another piece of furniture that was next to them down, or alerting me about the issue, the rendering engine just stuffed them in there, cut off. You could tell the pattern didn’t hold. At that point I just requested a revision from our designer through Modsy’s messaging tool, who made the swap.


One of Modsy’s very cool features is the ability to swap out pieces using their ‘Live Swap’ tool.

There’s a lot of unrealized potential in that tool: I’d have loved the ability to make a set of shelves narrower, or erase a top shelf I didn’t think I needed. Even with all the expert and technological guidance, it’s still a process that you’ll probably need to be involved in by giving feedback to your designer. You may also want to do your own research to understand the options around different colors of furnishings and available shelf lengths.

Heights and other measurements are clearly taken into account. A filing cabinet, upon which our printer was to rest, was exactly the same height as the desks it was next to. Our designer told us to double check the measurements on one set of furniture, because there was likely just enough space for the pieces she was suggesting.

The furniture came from major retailers like Crate and Barrel, CB2, West Elm, Article, Wayfair, and some brands I didn’t recognize.

Items that are on sale are marked in Modsy's system.

Items that are on sale are marked in Modsy’s system.
Credit: Mashable via modsy

Modsy’s drawbacks

It’s no secret that Modsy (and, I hope, the designers) makes a commission off of any furniture purchases through the service. Yet to have purchased every item included in our designs would have swelled our budget to comical proportions. Reader, there was a surfeit of side tables. My design revisions were largely about removing pieces of furniture and deciding how much storage we actually needed, so we didn’t buy more furniture than we had to.

Buying even just the main furniture pieces we were looking for — desks, console, filing cabinet, and bookshelves — would have nearly reached five figures. Sure, we could save up and chip away at it over time, but it’s not much fun to ogle a room you can’t have.

There’s also a sense that these are rooms designed for Instagram. They’re beautiful, but they don’t feel lived in. Perhaps that’s inevitable in a rendering. Only rooms that have been lived in can look that way.


It’s not much fun to ogle a room you can’t have.

Just like home decor magazine layouts, the 3D rooms need to be staged to make an impact. That means art on the walls, books and sculptures on shelves, and curtains over the windows. That they’re all shoppable seems fair.

Looking back at the designs, I can’t quite tell what’s a real design recommendation and what could be a requirement from Modsy that serves as a form of upselling. Must every room have at least two fake plants and a mirror?

While I appreciated that each new revision request creates a new design, I now have seven designs in my project. Each time I used the Live Swap tool to test out a new piece of furniture, the software saved a new design version. Formal revision requests from my designer did the same, and I had to keep track of which version to use as the base for subsequent revisions. Part of the purpose of using an interior designer was to avoid endless choices, not to play around with extra options interminably. Ultimately, we decided to wait to purchase until our designs came in from Havenly and see what they recommended.

You also need to keep a close eye on the delivery times of items included in your designs. Modsy is downstream from pandemic-induced furniture delivery delays. Often, I needed to go directly to the manufacturer’s website to see whether an item was backordered. I had to ask my designer for alternates for some pieces that had exceedingly long wait times.

Is Modsy worth it?

What is Modsy actually selling? The answer isn’t straightforward, and knowing your goal before going in would be wise. Are you seeking a personal shopper to suggest furniture you might like? Are you unsure of how best to organize a room’s layout? Do you just want to buy what they tell you and not think about it? Knowing those answers will help you steer toward your goal throughout the process.

It’s hard to imagine that most Modsy users will simply click “buy” on everything that’s recommended (I’m sure Modsy hopes I’m wrong!). So when I look at my designs, I find myself asking, “How much of this stuff do I need to buy to make my room feel like this?” That is, to feel finished and put together. I don’t have a good answer to that question.


Knowing your goal before going in would be wise.

The design process in general is time-consuming and challenging. Decisions are interconnected and there are lots of variables involved. For example, hanging open shelving requires knowing where your studs are and doing the installing (or paying someone else to do so, an added expense you have to arrange for yourself).

Maybe it’s as simple as the fact that committing to a design, furniture, a layout, is an active choice to foreclose all the other options, at least for now. As a recovering perfectionist, that was always going to feel hard. Perhaps here’s where the real work of an interior designer is (and what Modsy seems to approximate with its Luxe tier): Supporting you through your feelings.

Havenly delivers high-quality interior design on a budget

There are people who move into new places and immediately decorate and furnish them. People whose homes quickly come to feel lived in and finished. I am not one of those people.

After moving into a new apartment in June and knowing my spouse and I would have a home office to furnish, I finally admitted defeat sometime in October. In the month we’d initially hoped to be done with the project, we instead started looking for expert help to get it off the ground. Traditional interior designers charge around $100 an hour plus a commission, so when a friend suggested trying out an online interior design service as a cheaper alternative, we went for it.

We compared two online design services, Havenly and Modsy, by giving them the same assignment: Turn our office from a workspace with a plastic table for a desk into a functional room we could enjoy. The results — see the full Modsy review and the head-to-head comparison — showcased both the limits and potential of these services, and reminded us of the ripple effects of supply chain disruptions caused by the pandemic.

Getting started with Havenly

Havenly’s design process starts with an initial style quiz, though you can choose to skip it. Similar to Modsy, you choose example rooms you like, which the algorithm crunches to determine your design type and subtype. My main result was “Mid-Century Modern” with “Scandinavian,” “Industrial,” and “Bohemian” subtypes. These were accurate, if not groundbreaking observations. Design quizzes feel a bit like astrology or personality types —there’s enough in there to recognize that it’ll feel true, no matter what.

After a few more questions, you’re matched with a designer. Havenly puts the designers up front. Unlike with Modsy, where you’re assigned a designer, Havenly gives you options and you get to choose who to work with. Each designer has a small portfolio, and the site gives you a percentage match to indicate how satisfied you’re likely to be with them. I skipped my first suggested designer after being underwhelmed with their portfolio. Scrolling down, I found a designer with a high match percentage whose portfolio renderings all felt like real rooms that could be lived in. In a bonus, her expanded portfolio page had an example office I liked.


With Havenly, you get to choose the designer you’ll work with.

Most of the example rooms, whether in the style quizzes I took or in the designers’ portfolios, were living rooms or bedrooms. Kitchens were nonexistent, though there was the occasional dining area. It was often difficult to imagine how a design style would translate into an office without some examples; that’s an area where both Havenly and Modsy could improve.

Havenly also has an app, although it’s clunky to use. It was so hard to find the features I needed that I eventually gave up and reviewed my designs on my laptop.

How much does Havenly cost?

Havenly has two pricing tiers: Havenly Mini (currently $79) is a smaller package that promises “inspiration” to help “spice up your space or refresh a room.” If you’re starting from scratch furnishing a room, you’ll likely choose the Havenly Full package, currently $129. The main difference is that the Full level gives you a room layout and some “layout visualizations,” or renderings of the space.

Both packages include time with a designer via messaging, text, or the phone, as well as multiple revisions of concept boards of style ideas (which eventually includes a layout), and help with the ordering process.

Three Idea Boards represent slightly different design directions in Havenly.

Three Idea Boards represent slightly different design directions in Havenly.
Credit: Mashable screenshot via havenly

Havenly’s design process

After ordering my design package — I went with the “Full” package — I needed to make a room profile. This process was quite thorough and took about an hour. The software asked sensible questions, like whether I lived in an apartment or a house, and whether I owned or rented.

I took pictures of the space I wanted to improve from every corner, as instructed. I also submitted measurements and photos of any furniture we wanted to keep, as well as our floor plan. Havenly instructed me to draw one if I didn’t have one handy, which would have been a real pain if we hadn’t just moved in a few months ago and had the layout from the building saved. Later on, our actual furniture featured in the design we received, which made the space feel more ours.

We explained in the questionnaire how the room will be used and who will be spending time there. We also added a budget and a few other ancillary comments.


Accommodating pre-existing furniture was much easier with Havenly.

The one departure from the project specifications we sent to Modsy was at this point. We uploaded photos of a 12-piece framed map, which we planned to hang on the wall, to incorporate into the design. Accommodating pre-existing furniture was much easier with Havenly. I suspect this is because the renderings are a less prominent part of the process and it’s much easier to use a Photoshop-type program to add an item to a collage. With Modsy, a similar product would be used, or we’d have to pay $25 per item to have our own included in the renderings.

At this point, it was time to wait. Our designer wouldn’t be able to start our project for another week. Havenly suggested we could start sooner with another designer, but none of the others I looked at were available any earlier than the one I liked the best, so I waited.

At first it felt like slow momentum, but the turnaround times once she started went quickly. She messaged me via the Havenly site to ask for a link to a Pinterest board, if I had one, and any other inspiration images. It’s a pity it’s not easier to export Instagram bookmarks, as that’s now the platform where most of my browsing happens.

Within Havenly, you can rate products individually. Stuff you like will likely make it into your final design.

Within Havenly, you can rate products individually. Stuff you like will likely make it into your final design.
Credit: mahable screenshot via havenly

Havenly’s design process starts with 3 “Idea Boards,” which have different color palettes and vibes. Our designer offered to FaceTime to discuss them, though we ultimately stuck to messaging within Havenly.

Once you’ve chosen an Idea board, the designer creates a Concept Board. Here’s where you’ll start to see actual suggested products in the vein of the Idea Board that you previously approved. These are items that can all be purchased via Havenly, from companies like Article, West Elm, or Wayfair. In both the Concept Board and the Idea Board phase, the collages will be accompanied by a list of products that you can thumbs up or thumbs down. The products you like will be incorporated into the final design, so it’s important to take your time with this step and be clear with your designer about your preferences. We made sure to ask about alternate colors for a chair and buffet, as we wanted the option to move things to other rooms later and still have them match.


The collages will be accompanied by a list of products that you can thumbs up or thumbs down.

After the Concept Board comes the Final Design. This looks very similar to the Concept Board; when I received mine, I couldn’t at first detect a difference. However, once you click into the Final Design, there will be a right arrow that shows you the suggested layout. This is the first time you’re presented with a floor plan, and there is only one (in contrast, Modsy gives you two, and at the beginning of the process).

Initially, I would have preferred having the floor plan earlier in the design process. The biggest drawback of doing it this way, for me, was that I needed to approve furniture items to move forward without knowing exactly where they would go. The depth of a bookshelf or the height of a console depend on their place in a room, and it felt like I was making decisions with only partial information. After completing the process, I can see the wisdom of Havenly’s order of operations, which is more similar to a traditional interior design process. It requires more trust in the designer, but mine delivered.

That criticism aside, I was very pleased with the Havenly layout. The arrangement of the room was creative and functional, and better than the two layouts Modsy suggested. There was also a pleasant amount of furniture – the room felt furnished but not stuffed with furniture. Compared to Modsy’s, it was almost spartan. This also meant that it respected our budget much better. I didn’t have to look at the design and start calculating what we’d have to skip.

Havenly provides two final renderings of the room, each from a different angle.

Havenly provides two final renderings of the room, each from a different angle.
Credit: VIA HAVENLY

Having Havenly’s 3D rendering come last almost makes it unnecessary, whereas with Modsy, it’s the showpiece of the service. I had to make all of the decisions about what to buy before I could visualize the room, which seems like underutilizing the potential of the software. Havenly’s renderings are also not of the full 360 degrees of the room. Rather, it’s two views of the space from different angles, focusing on the furniture suggestions. While it’s certainly less cool than Modsy’s interactive renderings, it’s not any less useful. Havenly solved my actual problem — I need a functional office — which does not require a Sims-level interactive experience.

Havenly’s rendering hit a good balance between making it easier to visualize the space without virtually staging the whole room and thus cramming it full of stuff to buy.

Havenly’s drawbacks

Havenly’s messaging structure is confusing. Everything is in a text-message format, so there’s lots of scrolling to see previous messages. Once we approved a change, our designer updated the design itself, erasing the earlier version. While this avoids the version control explosion that Modsy creates, it makes it hard to track changes.

Choosing products without knowing the room layout was also confusing, and I wish this part of the process had been clearer. I didn’t realize that we’d passed into the “this is your furniture” part of the process until it had already happened. There are, however, “designer alternates” for each piece, and the software suggests additional options if you want to swap something out. I rather liked the way that Modsy’s two initial renderings (which are akin to Havenly’s Concept Boards) gave me two different spaces and furniture options.


Choosing products without knowing the room layout was confusing.

The Havenly designer gets a commission on any furniture that’s included in the final design that you then purchase. This means that if you swap something out, perhaps because you find something else on sale or that can be delivered sooner, they don’t make any money on it. Knowing this, I felt more inclined to ask for extra revisions to make sure the items I was planning to buy were incorporated into the design. Havenly works with a number of brands to source furniture, including CB2, Serena & Lily, and Anthropologie.

The layout included with Havenly's final design

The layout included with Havenly’s final design
Credit: via havenly

The supply chain

This is not the easiest time to be buying furniture (or really much of anything). That makes it doubly difficult to get the most out of Havenly. A product that is meant to make my life easier frequently just gave me headaches.

First and most egregiously, Havenly doesn’t have updated delivery information for many of the products that it recommends. This is likely an API issue on the part of the furniture manufacturers themselves, but it affects popular brands like West Elm, Article, and Crate & Barrel. I was told I’d see the estimated delivery date on my receipt.

Instead of doing that — and running the risk that something wouldn’t be available for a year — I cross-referenced each item on the manufacturer’s website to see the estimated delivery date before I bought it. The earliest items would come was January or February, though two items wouldn’t be delivered until May or June. There’s no way to filter items by delivery date, so I wound up asking my designer to provide alternatives. It’s perhaps possible to manage this at the outset, instructing the designer not to suggest anything that isn’t available within a certain time frame. As it was, it was painful to get excited about a room that I couldn’t have, which initially discouraged me from buying anything.


Ultimately, I asked my designer to suggest alternatives that could arrive sooner, and sourced items myself.

If I’m going to need to source products myself based on the delivery estimates, it seriously undermines the service that a company like Havenly or Modsy provides. Since there’s no discount baked into the purchase, there’s little incentive to buy from them instead of a retailer — and everything they offer with regard to furniture comes from other retailers. An exception is for discounts that apply to a minimum order volume. In those cases, it’s worth searching to see if Havenly carries other items you may have your eye on, so you’ll get a discount on the whole lot.

Ultimately, I asked my designer to suggest alternatives that could arrive sooner, and sourced items myself. Once I found what I liked, she added it to the design and then I ordered it. Had I not cared about her commission, I could have ordered the bookshelf and desks directly from West Elm, or ordered them through Havenly without adding them to the final design.

Ordering with Havenly

After you’ve added your desired items to your Havenly cart, you can request a shipping invoice to confirm the shipping charges and delivery level (if applicable) before you actually pay. We paid for a delivery service that included assembly and the option to make a delivery appointment. Delivery levels are set by the retailers, not Havenly. This process concluded within a day. From there, I hit buy and started to wait.


Tl;dr, I needed to ignore the order page and wait for a phone call.

After checking out, subsequent log-ins showed me a “Manage Order” menu. Here, I could see the order status and get shipping updates. It’s a little weird not to have access to the direct order confirmation from the manufacturer, though I did get an email from Havenly when the first item shipped. Havenly’s messaging around the other items though, was incredibly confusing. On my order management page, I was simultaneously getting told that my furniture delivery was ready to be scheduled and that I would get an email when it was ready to be scheduled. A call to customer service revealed what was actually happening: I wouldn’t get an email at all but rather a call from West Elm to schedule my delivery. That wouldn’t happen until all the items in my order were available, and one wouldn’t be ready until January. Tl;dr, I needed to ignore the order page and wait for a phone call.

Irritating details such as bad messaging or confusing designs make Havenly seem like a new startup, when in reality it’s been in business since 2014 and has raised $85 million of dollars in funding. My designer did a good job walking me through the process, but the proprietary terminology didn’t make it accessible.

The easy way to a more beautiful space?

My office will soon have two desks, a bookshelf, and a lamp, assuming West Elm doesn’t leave me in a lurch. By that metric, Havenly was a success. The design process was pleasant. My designer knew what she was doing and was lovely to work with. The end results were in line with our budget and our tastes. The criticisms that I have about the delivery times feel somewhat unfair in the midst of a global supply shortage.

That said, I do think Havenly could make it easier to browse alternate furniture on my own, either through their site or via a browser extension that would show me what items were available through them. At times I felt like I was taking advantage of my designer by asking for too many changes, or cutting her out of a commission if I found something else in another place, even though she’d done a lot of work. This doesn’t add up to a great emotional experience using a service, and, the fact is, a layout and initial design suggestion is a valuable product on its own.

I can see a valuable role for a service like Havenly, used wisely. To that end, either be clear about your delivery timelines when you go in — or wait to use it until more furniture is back in stock.

The 5 best work-from-home tech upgrades at CES 2022

Well, here we go again. For a lot of folks, 2022 promises even more working from home, whether by choice or not.

The good news is that nearly two full years of empty offices in parts of the world have accelerated the progress of work-from-home technology. That was plenty evident at CES 2022, the tech industry’s largest annual showcase. From robots that clean while you work to better webcams for video calls and everything else in between, 2022 could be the easiest year for WFH yet.

Roborock S7 MaxV Ultra 

First up is a decidedly baller robot vacuum. Sure, things like Roombas have been around for years, but as we spend more time at home, it’s inevitable that more gunk will accumulate on the floor. We need something more powerful and up to the task of cleaning during this prolonged period of wearing sweatpants to work. 

Meet the Roborock S7 MaxV Ultra. It’s a high-tech vacuum with cameras, a LiDAR scanner, and other AI features that help it build a 3D map of your home for theoretically better automatic navigation than the competition. It also comes with a dock that you put it in when it’s not in use, where it will automatically refill its water container, empty out its dustbin, and clean its mop system.

Welcome to a new era of laziness. Chores are so last year.

1080p laptop webcams

Woman using Lenovo laptop webcam

Laptop webcams are about to get a lot better.
Credit: Lenovo

Anyone who has spent the last two years or so regularly making video calls (for work or otherwise) knows that most webcams built into laptops just aren’t very good. Your coworkers, parents, nieces, etc. just don’t look flattering in 720p. That may have been an acceptable standard for high definition 15 years ago, but times have changed.

Lenovo and HP, for example, both committed to higher-res webcams for their laptops at CES this year. Lenovo’s Yoga and ThinkPad line got outfitted with 1080p lenses, and HP put 5MP webcams on all of its computers it showed off at CES. This isn’t revolutionary or unexpected, really, but after years of grainy, crappy-looking video calls, it’s a welcome change.

TP-Link Deco XE200

TP-Link Deco XE200 router against white background

One of these fellas should blanket your home in WiFi.
Credit: TP-Link

It’s also safe to assume that working from home has revealed plenty of holes in your internet service that need patched up. While the quality of signal you get into your modem is something that only your ISP can fix, what you do with that signal can turn a WiFi dead-zone into a WiFi paradise thanks to mesh routers

TP-Link’s Deco XE200 mesh system from CES isn’t cheap, with an expected price of $800 for two units, but it promises to extend your internet signal to every part of the house. Two of these should cover up to 6,500 square feet in beautiful WiFi, and each unit comes with three high-speed LAN ports in case you need to hook up a desktop PC or game console for maximum stability. If you find certain corners of your home lacking in useful internet connectivity, seriously consider picking up a mesh system like this one.

Full-body video calls

Man demonstrating La Vitre video call device

This is a war on sweatpants.
Credit: La Vitre

One of the best things about working from home is that you don’t need to necessarily look your best all the time. There’s no one to impress but yourself. The 7-foot video call device known as la Vitre is maybe more horrifying than progressive, but it’s worth noting either way.

It’s an always-on, full-body video call device that, at the moment, is primarily used in offices for presentations and such. But the folks behind la Vitre didn’t rule out eventual home use down the line. You can recreate all of those awkward office conversations where both people are standing up and neither one knows how or when to end the chat, and get back to work. And again, although there’s an option to blur the image, it’s always on.

The future doesn’t always look bright.

Bonus concept that may never come out: LG Omnipod

LG Omnipod car

You know what? Sure. Let’s get weird with it.
Credit: LG

One of the most oddball ideas shown off at CES 2022 is the LG Omnipod, which the South Korean electronics giant calls a “future mobility concept cabin.” In other words, it’s a car that can also be your home office thanks to modular, upgradeable appliances, big screens, and an AI concierge to assist in things like ordering food.

Who said WFH needed to be restricted to a house or apartment? If Omnipod ever hits the market (LG calling it a “concept” means that could never happen), you could take all your video calls from a moving bachelor pad with AI that orders lunch while you watch movies. Nothing says WFH innovation like redefining what, exactly, a home is.