
Technology planning kicks off in 2007 ahead of Beijing Games...
By Andy McCue
Published: 6 July 2005 18:11 GMT
Planning for the technology infrastructure that will underpin the London Olympic Games in 2012, including the need for thousands of volunteer IT staff, will begin ahead of the 2008 Beijing games.
As part of its newly renewed outsourcing deal with the International Olympic Committee (IOC), Atos Origin will now be responsible for all the IT systems and support in London after the city came from behind to defeat the favourite Paris in a dramatic vote today.
Alan Crompton, operations manager at Atos Origin for the 2006 Torino Winter Olympics, told silicon.com that planning for the London Games will begin about a year before the Beijing Olympics.
"We will start to communicate with the organising committee about security, games management systems, accreditation and helpdesk services," he said.
Once the Beijing Games are finished in 2008, Atos Origin will then send its full front-line team to London to begin the rollout.
Crompton said the fact that the Greenfield East London Olympics site will virtually have to be built from scratch will make it easier to build the IT from the ground up. But he acknowledged that there will also be challenges.
"Venues and infrastructure are always going to be a challenge. Typically we are the first ones in and last ones out and any lateness in delivery means we have to react quickly to that," he said.
Crompton said he was "delighted" that London had come from behind to beat Paris in the final vote and that on a personal level it will be special to work on the Olympic Games in his own country.
"I've worked in Salt Lake, Athens and Sydney but it gives you a different perspective in your home country," he said.
Staffing will also be an issue, with the Olympic spirit of volunteering extending to IT support for the games. For the Athens games last year Atos Origin had around 1,400 of its own staff along with 2,000 IT volunteers who had to go through police background checks in order to work in low-level support positions.
As part of a separate contract, IT suppliers also have just two days to register their interest in providing some of the technology to support the planning of London's Olympic Games.
Last month the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) sent out a contract notice seeking expressions of interest from companies interested in the provision of IT and telecoms services for the organisations involved with planning the game.
Requirements will include desk-based computing for around 250 users initially, with the potential for a user base of more than 2,000 over the life of the project.
Whats the odds on someone deciding to use RFID, Wi...
Roger Huffadine
I thought the major arguement for having this farc...
Cliff Moore
Pretty good.. Paris looses the Olympics.. French q...
Dick Winchester
I guess many of the 2000 "volunteers" would be Lon...
Nick (aka Victor)
Watch how the government reels graduates and IT pe...
Anonymous
Atos Origin is the Worldwide Information Technology Partner for the Olympic Games and has a client base of international blue-chip companies across ...
Atos Origin is the Worldwide Information Technology Partner for the Olympic Games and has a client base of international blue-chip companies across ...
Our clients are amongst the leading organisations in their respective sectors and depend on Atos Origin to help them optimise their infrastructure. ...
Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.
Dell PowerVault DL2100 Powered by CommVault - Spec Sheet
Data Protection Strategies: Deduplication for More Efficient Backups
True Convergence Demands a Communication Service Provider that Embraces a Customer-Centric...
Learn how Performance Metrics for Telcomm Expense Management Drive new ROIs and SLAs
Stories from the web...
Copyright © 2008 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved. Top of page
Mark Crichard Doing business with citizen developers: Beware the legal pitfalls Legal Eye: Make sure your business is protected from potential hazards
Tim Ferguson How CIOs can achieve post-recession success Q&A: McKinsey & Company on living in the 'new normal' business world