Why the Feeling of ‘Home’ Is Forever Evolving
As our team has been working to build 3, I’ve found myself thinking a lot about the notion of home. Not just where we call home, but also what “home” actually means. In Western society, media and pop culture, we tend to talk about it as if it’s a singular, not to mention permanent, place. [&
For These Busy Executives, Home Is A Meeting Place—& Everyone’s Invited
Talking about the home you share with your life and business partner from separate rooms might sound like a bemusing quirk, but for Arati Sharma and Satish Kanwar, founders of tech investment firm Good Future, it’s just another day at the office. “We never take meetings together,” Sharma says
What Does Home Mean for Those Who Live Between Borders?
Home. For most, it’s a place, a familiar landscape, a return to the roots. But for the global citizens among us, home is an evolving concept, shaped by the places we’ve lived, the languages we speak and the myriad cultures that colour our lives. The theme of this issue of 3 magazine explores wha
Why It’s Time to Close the AI Knowledge Divide
The first iPad came out in 2010, and within a few years, the market was also flooded with affordable Android handhelds. On these devices, Skype and FaceTime made the Jetsons-era idea of a videophone possible, but I noticed a glaring issue. I wanted to purchase one for my grandmother so she could bet
With Her New Book, Catherine Hernandez Delves Into Her Own History
Catherine Hernandez’s latest novel, Behind You, is not your usual ripped-from-the-headlines story, and the first hint is the book’s opening epigraph: “It’s not about him, it’s about us.” The “him” is an unnamed serial killer modelled after the real-life criminal who stalked Sca
How Montreal Museum of Fine Arts’ Léuli Eshrāghi Is Bringing Indigenous Perspectives to the Forefront
Léuli Eshrāghi didn’t intend to become a curator; with an academic background in film, languages, literature, museum studies and art history, Eshrāghi’s original intention was to work as an artist, and they started that career in 2011. But after seeing what they described as more “superfici
TSO’s Mark Williams is Proving that the Symphony is for Everyone
Mark Williams has always had a reverence for music. In fourth grade, when it was time for Williams and his classmates to pick the instruments they’d master in music class that year, he brought home a mimeographed sheet detailing all of his options and spent hours deliberating with his family. Woul
Restaurateur Tannis Ling Isn’t Afraid of Putting A Spin on Cultural Cuisine
When Vancouver-born Tannis Ling left her hometown in 2001 to work as a bartender in London, U.K., she immersed herself in the city’s concept-driven bars and restaurants, which she says were years ahead of Vancouver’s bar scene at the time. “Every detail has been thought of, the design, music,

