Net Art Review stops its activities in the month of September 2005. The new website newmediafix.net will be expanding on the philosophy that led to the creation of NAR. The new site will allow for a more diverse approach to the many areas of emerging technologies and new media culture. NAR readers are invited to visit it just as often as they did Net Art Review.
As founder, I want to thank everyone who collaborated regularly on NAR. I also thank people who sent an occasional text from time to time, and, of course, I thank our readers. I want to especially thank the three contributing editors, Ana Boa-Ventura, Molly Hankwitz, and Lora McPhail who kept NAR going strong during the last six months. I also thank our regular contributors for producing great material consistently. Their texts are now part of an archive that is available to online communities.
NAR was founded on February of 2003 and it passes the baton to newmediafix.net on September 2005. This is an exciting time because the new website offers fresh possibilities for collaboration and online publishing.
This will be a new journey. So, please make sure to visit the new website: http://newmediafix.net
And as a final thanks, I leave you with the names of our contributors and editors who deserve all the acknowledgment in the world,
Daniele Balit (Rome, IT/Paris, FR) Linda Carroli (Brisbane, AU) Nicholas Economos (Alfred, NY, US) Mark R. Hancock (Coventry, U.K.) Peter Luining (Amsterdam, NL) Francesca De Nicolo (Rome, IT) Ignacio Nieto (Santiago, CL) Kristen Palana (New Jersey, US) Isabel Saij (Cologne, GE/Paris, FR) Ludmil Trenkov (Pasadena, CA, US) Ana Valdes (Sweden)
Former Contributing Writers: Garrett Lynch -- Contributing Writer (Kent, UK) Lewis LaCook Neil Jenkins
As of the month of September NAR stops its activities to let the new resource newmediafix.net take over. Please visit it and peruse it often.
newmediaFIX takes on a broader approach on the many areas of emerging technologies and new media. And don't forget to visit the NAR weekly features archive, which will stay online.