RSRE Flex: reviving an innovative, remarkably odd British operating system that almost nobody knows about

Talk by T Stepleton (they/them)

1980: Royal Signals and Radar Establishment researchers realise Flex, a mould-breaking, comprehensively alternative vision of computing. Features: - All-hypertext interface (oddly never described thus) - Allusions to ancient Egyptian orthography - Unforgeable pointers for security - Write-once filesystem with nameless files (which you didn't mind) - Implementation in the (infamously) complicated language Algol 68 - First-class functions and typechecking everywhere (I'll explain what that means) - Memorable... hardware choices Today: Flex runs again for the first time in (probably) decades! In this spirited talk (for general audiences *and* OS geeks) I'll live-demo its unique "feel" while describing its origins, fate, and unlikely revival (hint: mouldy 8" floppies). I'll also call for help: maybe YOU know people and information needed to share it publicly. Ahead of its time, maybe ours too, or maybe outside of it: everyone should be able to try Flex. Hopefully this talk brings us one step closer!

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