While browsing the internet using Mosaic, I found the following announcement. Has everyone heard of this? CinemaSpace UC Berkeley's Film Studies program has created CinemaSpace: a new www journal focusing on the cinema and its transformation in the digital age. CinemaSpace will engage writers from a broad range of fields : Literature, Film, Cultural Theory, Computer Science, and Philosophy. The journal aims to break free of disciplinary boundaries and bring a diverse assortment of writers, thinkers and users of technology into mutual collaboration and exchange for the purposes of elucidating the transformation of cinema in the age of digital replication. If you are intested in making a submission please contact [log in to unmask] Right now, they simply have the site set up with a syllabus from Alexander Cohen and lecture notes from one class from this course. The first issue is supposed to come out soon. To check it out, go to the "What's New on Mosaic" page. With the ability to write with hypertext and create anchors (links/buttons) to any database on the net, this promises to open up new ways of writing criticism and history. I'm curious: what film/tv programs out there are integrating multimedia and internet in their curriculum? The University of Southern California has a class bringing close textual analysis and multimedia together. Any others? ---Markus