I think there are two funding programs, one under the Canadian Culture Online program--and as I said, I'm not directly responsible for that, but I do know they have funded a number of aboriginal projects. The Virtual Museum of Canada, a number of first nations, Inuit, and I believe at least one Métis project as well have been funded by that program. A major project was a partnership between the Innu in northern Labrador, The Rooms, and the Canadian Heritage Information Network. The Haida on the west coast and a number of other exhibits across the country have had very strong leadership from aboriginal peoples.
The feedback on those exhibitions is wonderful. The power of the exhibitions to capture language as well as to reflect other dimensions of culture has been remarked on.
Apart from operating the Virtual Museum, CHIN also conducts research, develops learning resources, and is dedicated to assisting the museum community, together with aboriginal peoples, to use the new medium. Last year, the Virtual Museum of Canada attracted about 10 million visitors from around the world, so it's proving to be a very powerful mechanism.