London 2012's tech backbone to be trimmed

Daily Newsletters

Sign up to ZDNet UK's daily newsletter.

NEWS

The IT backbone for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games is to be trimmed as part of a drive for "sustainability".

Each part of the computing infrastructure will be streamlined to minimise redundant equipment and energy consumption, according to the Games' new chief integrator, Michele Hyron.

Hyron, who works for Atos Origin, is leading the consortium of IT companies designing and building the technology infrastructure that will handle sporting results from 94 venues across the UK, relaying them across the globe in less than a second.

Atos hopes to continue using and building on the Commentator Information System it offered during the Beijing Games, providing real-time information on events to broadcasters across the world.

"For London, we think that people will want even more access to results, pictures and information about the sites in real-time," said Hyron.

However, the number of results terminals used during the 2012 Games could be cut from the 2,500 used in Beijing, with results relayed via the public wireless internet access expected to be available throughout the Olympic Park.

The announcement comes days after Kevan Gosper, member of the International Olympic Committee's press commission, warned that the London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games faces the toughest economic conditions outside of wartime in delivering the 2012 Games.

Hyron told ZDNet UK sister site silicon.com: "We will have a challenge related to providing new ideas to deliver sustainability at the London 2012 Games. We will be working with the organising committee to be as cost-effective as possible in terms of the architecture."

"When designing the architecture of the systems, we will be creative in terms of reducing consumption and reducing the amount of equipment and paper that will be used. We are learning about streamlining our processes and ways of working from Games to Games," said Hyron.

Hyron will head a team that will increase in size to several thousands by the start of the Games in July 2012, delivering more than 1,000 servers, 10,000 PCs and 4,000 printers.

The IT systems will also process accreditation badges for the 250,000 people linked to the Games, as well as managing staff rotas.

Atos Origin handled 12 million security alerts per day at the Beijing Olympics using its proprietary monitoring systems, and will conduct more than 200,000 hours of testing on the London Games systems, starting in 2010.

"During the course of the previous Games, we have developed a very thorough monitoring system that is performing very well," she said.

Hyron was previously operations manager at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games, integration manager at the Athens 2004 Games and quality manager at the Salt Lake City Games.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your ZDNet UK account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy. Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Community FAQ

Get ZDNet UK's daily newsletter

Enter your email address to sign up

ZDNet UK Live

Jack Schofield

@openhgs Windows users have had multiple desktops since Linus started writing Linux. They just haven't shipped as standard because not enough...

14 hours ago by Jack Schofield on Windows 8 could speed multi-monitor uptake
Jack Schofield

@Phil at Cloud4 What, Microsoft gets £1,200 per PC and £1,622 per server? Gosh, I'm amazed....

14 hours ago by Jack Schofield on 6 million wasted licences and £1,200 PCs: welcome to government IT
craigsc

You guys have no idea what is going on at Autonomy. Autonomy could have been a much more profitable organization. The sales operations at Autonomy...

16 hours ago by craigsc on HP cuts 27,000 staff as Autonomy chief Lynch leaves
Moley

How does this impact on dual or multi booting? Seems to me to more or less prohibit this, from Windows 8 anyway. Will Grub 2 recognise Windows 8,...

16 hours ago by Moley on Windows 8 start-up speed forces USB boot workaround
apexwm

I don't understand why there cannot be a slight pause during the boot process so the user can press a key. Many operating systems do this, even if...

17 hours ago by apexwm on Windows 8 start-up speed forces USB boot workaround
Gavin Goodman

You can now buy the Xi3 modular computer in the UK at http://www.ocdistribution.com . This can be bought with the Tand3m software, pricing and...

18 hours ago by Gavin Goodman on CES 2012: Xi3 microSERV3R
Phil at Cloud4

I agree: Mike Lynch can clearly build a business and manage strategy. I suspect the exit of Mike is more likely the end of a planned handover...

21 hours ago by Phil at Cloud4 on HP cuts 27,000 staff as Autonomy chief Lynch leaves
Phil at Cloud4

This is unbeleivable government wastage with only one winner... Microsoft 1 - Tax payer Nil!

21 hours ago by Phil at Cloud4 on 6 million wasted licences and £1,200 PCs: welcome to government IT
Mispam

So what do you do when you can't boot into windows? Why can't I just hold Shift while I power up instead of having to boot into windows and click a...

22 hours ago by Mispam on Windows 8 start-up speed forces USB boot workaround
apexwm

I've also seen that Mac OS X for Intel machines is supposed to run in VirtualBox, which would also be a nice solution. I've never tried it though.

24 hours ago by apexwm on xTreme Triple Booting: Linux, Mac & Windows
dave heasman

What I wonder is why when companies are caught bang to rights in not providing contracted services, people bend over to smear the customers? Surely...

1 day ago by dave heasman on Virgin throttles broadband for high-speed customers
pjc158

Strange statement from HP regarding Mike Lynch and not capable of scaling a company. Autonomy was a $7bn purchase which started as a small company...

1 day ago by pjc158 on HP cuts 27,000 staff as Autonomy chief Lynch leaves
lojolondon

Or - possibly, they will destroy business by ensuring people do not invest where there is no return. Another socialist idea, well beyond it's...

1 day ago by lojolondon on Open Data Institute will act as biz incubator
J.A. Watson

Good stuff Jake, very interesting. Thanks. jw

1 day ago by J.A. Watson on xTreme Triple Booting: Linux, Mac & Windows
openhgs

"the cost of a second LCD screen is about the same as one day of an office worker's time, so this should soon be recouped in extra productivity."...

1 day ago by openhgs on Windows 8 could speed multi-monitor uptake
Thomas Gellhaus

I also installed the KDE version; I also will probably try out razorqt since I really haven't had a chance to before. I'm looking forward to the...

2 days ago by Thomas Gellhaus via Facebook on Mageia 2 Released
francisabigail

Acquiring when reinvention/cannibalization is too challenging for a large organization can be an excellent strategy- still, so many mergers stumble...

2 days ago by francisabigail on Ariba buy parks SAP on Oracle's cloud turf
apexwm

All of the feedback regarding using a touch monitor for a desktop PC is right on. Several months ago, we installed a "demo" multitouch all-in-one...

2 days ago by apexwm on Windows 8 could speed multi-monitor uptake
191706

anyone wanting to triple boot *their* own Mac

2 days ago by 191706 on xTreme Triple Booting: Linux, Mac & Windows
SoapyTablet

Cont.. Biggest Bugbear: Win7's stop-animate-go approach to work, you develop a staggered (not in the above alchohol sense of the word) approach to...

2 days ago by SoapyTablet on Windows 8 could speed multi-monitor uptake