Day 3 of #UndoneCS starts with a session on “Undone CS in the cloud.”

The first talk will be on “Agile software production in computational infrastructures,” given by Donald Jay Bertulfo.

https://www.undonecs.org/2026/programme.html

Conference programme

2nd conference on Undone Science in Computer Science

Undone Computer Science 2026

The session continues with the talk “From research to @deuxfleurs and back again: towards digital service infrastructure as commons” by Baptiste Jonglez and Lucien Astié.

#UndoneCS

Now, Chung-Hong Chan on “Computer science first, social sciences second: A critical sociological account of Computational Social Science.”

#UndoneCS

Very interesting analysis of CSS as essentially a hostile takeover of the social sciences by CS.

#UndoneCS

BA would be more legitimate, but AB has the prestige—with very real impacts on academic careers.

#UndoneCS

After lunch, #UndoneCS continues with a talk by Diego F. Aranha: “What is Cryptography Hiding from Itself?”
Now at #UndoneCS: Jacob Bruggeman and Megan Finn on “Undone Codes: Ethics in the @ACM 1966-1992.”

“College courses in computers may be creating digital criminals.”

#UndoneCS

The final talk in the #UndoneCS session on Undone CS and ethics is given by Mohamed Abdalla: “Undone Canadian CS Ethics: Real-world Moral Dilemmas and Responsibilities.”

We’re launching into the last session of #UndoneCS on Undone CS without and within limits.

First talk: “The indirect rebound effects of AI as undone science: philosophical reflection on two structural causes” by Damien Lacroux.

Technology and the Collingridge dilemma. #UndoneCS

Interesting point made by Damien Lacroux: the problem isn’t the absence of anticipation, but the absence of a *shared* anticipation.

#UndoneCS

And… The final talk of #UndoneCS: “Cultivating a Historicist Sensibility through Permacomputing” given by Nils Bonfils.
It’s a wrap! Thanks to the organizers of #UndoneCS, it was a great experience!

@mxp Wait, I recognize that logo.

It's not Forth, it's ColorForth, a crazy IDE that runs on bare metal, an editor that only works in memory on what is currently executing, a keyboard driver that defaults to dvorak, and a language where color have semantics.

I still have nightmares about that thing.

@max @mxp

I think ColorForth is really the work of a genius. Have you tried using it? Having tried personally I can say that it feels a bit like being at the command of a spaceship. The changing keyboard layout that adapt to the current context and what is type is super interesting too. Definitely deserves more attention!
Happy that someone caught it :)

@nils @mxp I have, actually; I bought a GreenArray dev board 10 years ago, after some random guy I met at a CCC event talked me into it.

It definitely felt like the work of a genius, meaning I felt way too dumb to do anything useful with it.

I love concatenative languages, I've played with factor and uiua. I think the semantic color is a stroke of genius, and also a giant middle finger to colorblind hackers.