FLOSS @ Oxford
Free, Libre and Open Source Software Events in Oxford, United Kingdom.
(⬇️ Please scroll down ⬇️)

Except where otherwise specified:
Open to anyone in the city, technical or not, whether a free software expert or newbie.
Just turn up; no registration required!
Wherever possible, in-person events should also be streamed online; see their pages below.

Add to your calendar: https://ox.ogeer.org/feed/ics?show_recurrent=true

Self-hosted with the Free (AGPL-3.0) Software Gancio. Fallback photo CC-BY-SA 4.0 Chensiyuan via Wikimedia Commons, Background image CC-BY-SA 4.0 MotionEnsemble.de for FSFE
Events Jan-Mar 2026 organised by Laura Fortunato and Oliver Geer
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Past Events

A screenshot of Emacs with a yellowish light theme. An editor panel is open at the top, and a calendar panel at the bottom, showing University of Oxford week names alongside the dates for three months. The editor panel contains a comment describing the use of the calendar (it's Prot's oxford-calendar package).

Computing in freedom with GNU Emacs - Protesilaos Stavrou

Thursday, Mar 12, 06:00 PM GMT-07:00 PM Thursday 12 March 19:00
online
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open-leveltalk
A wordmark for OxFOS, mostly in dark blue on a white background, then a horizontal line and the phrase "Oxford Forum of Open Scholarship" below it.

The first "O" has a keyhole in it, and the second "O" is a padlock being unlocked with rays coming our of it for effect.

The line and second "O" as well as the phrase "Open Scholarship" are all in orange.

[External] OxFOS: Oxford Forum of Open Scholarship (Online Events)

Monday, Mar 02, 12:00 AM GMT → Friday, Mar 06 Friday 6 March 23:55
online
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external
The Software Freedom Conservancy logo: a vector image of a physical tree with a data structure tree inside of it.

[CANCELLED FOR NOW] Copyleft and Protecting Users’ Right to Repair - Karen Sandler, Software Freedom Conservancy

Friday, Feb 20, 06:00 PM GMT-07:00 PM Friday 20 February 19:00
online
null
open-leveltalk
A collage of three photographs of mentors and students at work. In two of them, someone is seen through a glass pane and is writing on the pane with a whiteboard pen. In one of these two photos someone else is partially visible sitting at a table in the room with a laptop, watching the writer. In the third photo, someone is presenting two coloured parameter graphs of prey death and growth rates under two models, and whether a population is divergent, dies out, or is stable. They are at a projector, and two people are visible watching from a table with closed laptops, taken from a perspective as if the camera is held by one of the viewers.

Teaching High School Students Research Computing - Andrea Bruno and Mark Galassi, Los Alamos National Laboratory and Institute for Computing in Research

Friday, Feb 06, 04:00 PM GMT-05:00 PM Friday 6 February 17:00
online
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open-leveltalk
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