By celebrating and reminding readers of artists who are well-known but underappreciated such as Michael Snow, Robert Adrian X, David Rokeby, and Les Levine as well as introducing unknown artists who deserve recognition, Variable Conditions shows how early developments in computational arts in Canada were of global significance. It will appeal to anyone interested in the history of contemporary art, especially given how artists working in this area in the 1960s and onwards did so much to anticipate our current digital cultural condition. Charlie Gere, author of Digital Culture Variable Conditions demonstrate(s) what artists and art historians have to offer this material history of computers as both medium and metaphor. The strongest contributions vividly invoke the institutional and social worlds that catalyzed these artistic experiments. This comes across most compellingly in the artist interviews, which elaborate the complexities of agency, innovation, and influence. Technology & Culture