London2012: Shame on LOCOG Charging for 7/7 Bomb Victims and Families to watch The Games

Attack: This bus was destroyed by a bomber in Tavistock Square, London in 2005

It’s a bad start to the day when the news is of LOCOG charging for the ‘free’ tickets for survivors and the families of the victims of the July 7th bombings in 2005. OK so they are not charging the people themselves, but they are charging the taxpayer £221,000 according to the Mail report.

 

It seems a callous act to HD to even think of getting money back for the free tickets that the London mayor had promised them.

 

‘The GLA offered tickets to the families of the 52 people killed in the attacks and to 91 others who sustained ‘serious injuries’.  This was particularly poignant because the attacks on July 7, 2005, happened the day after the capital won its bid to host the Games…’

As a taxpayer, I am happy to foot this bill. If you have read from the start of HD’s journey you will know that the London bombings were the reason why he is a GAMESMAKER today. If I and 70000 others can do this for nothing (and may I add a lot of additional traveling costs as well) then an organization as big as LOCOG could forget their ticket receipts on this occasion. Shame on LOCOG’s men in suits and their innate greed!!!

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London2012: New Zealand Olympic Committee Sends Heathrow Scouting Party!

It’s started then. The jibes about the country’s airports that is. This Olympic Committee member was quick off the mark to condemn Heathrow’s immigration control:

‘A member of the International Olympic Committee today branded Heathrow airport a “nightmare” after enduring a two-hour wait at immigration.

Former New Zealand Olympic windsurf champion Barbara Kendall, a veteran of five Olympics, became the first member of the IOC to openly criticise the embattled airport….’

Only Two hours! Try going to the Canary Islands mate!!!

There’s NO GAMESMAKERS on duty yet!

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London2012: No Smoke Without Fire Maybe

So there’s no money but that has not stopped the Women’s Volleyball team being ready to compete at London2012. Not to be outdone by lack of official funds:

‘This year, the whole squad is spending the summer living at the South Yorkshire Fire & Rescue training centre in Sheffield…’

Well HD reckons that might be any woman’s wish come true, then HD cannot be unGamesmaker-like and be sexist about this. Can I?

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London2012: Final IT Systems Tests This Week

LOCOG and their lead systems integrator, ATOS will spearhead the final testing of systems across 17 venues this week. This also includes a simulated disaster recovery event to ensure that systems are ready and able to recover within hours from any disaster.

This reminds HD of when I was working in the city of London during the 9/11 events in New York and elsewhere. It’s not something one tends to forget in a hurry when one sees live on the overhead monitor, planes crashing into office towers!

I had arrived late that morning not being an early bird, only to find everyone glued to the screens around the office. At that point no-one knew exactly what had happened in New York. Grabbing the mandatory coffee and sitting down to also watch the events unfold within ten minutes the second plane hit the other tower in front of our eyes. Everyone was mesmerized and it then started to dawn that something major had  began to emerge. The next thing I noticed was that some of the data feeds to my Reuters terminal had stopped showing up as usual, but just then I never related the two events, not then anyway.

It was quite a few minutes later that the enormity of the terrorist attacks on New York started to sink in around the office. Within about one hour we had some sort of handle on what was happening, but there was little guidance from senior management. Being responsible for our disaster recovery centre as well as all the market data systems, I just got on with finding out what the effects on user data were and whether we needed to take actions regarding disaster recovery.

Within two hours I was at the recovery centre organising the possibility of gearing them up for action. It turned out that it was not necessary since eventually senior management gave the word for trading to cease and for all staff to leave the premises. I went back to the main office to find a few of my colleagues gathering tapes and all sorts of data up to take home with them. Just in case!

We left the offices at about 4pm, much later than the rest of the staff, and the talk by then was that maybe over 10,000 persons may have perished in the twin towers as they collapsed that afternoon(GMT). It was much later, probably days when I realized I had been sitting in an office on the ground floor of 33 Old Broad Street, adjacent to Tower42(formerly the NatWest Tower) and then still the tallest occupied tower block in the city of London. It would have been the equivalent to the Twin Towers of The World Trade Centre in New York, now just piles of rubble and mountains of dust particles. Had the terrorist chose London as their target Tower42 would have surely been on their radar for attack, but none of that sunk in at the time.

In the aftermath of events I learned that just one system had been affected, a system operated by Thomsons. It had operated out of one of the Twin Towers. Unfortunately its disaster recovery system was in the second tower and obviously it also failed that afternoon!

However, more importantly, we were learning that almost 3000 persons had lost their lives that day and that our experiences were insignificant in comparison to those of New York.

This is why I am reminded while ATOS and the other lead suppliers go through their disaster recovery exercise this week, that no matter how much you train and exercise events can overtake you very rapidly. LOCOG technical people say that if the technology works around all the venues then they and us technology volunteers of course, will just merge into the background of a truely great Games. That’s my wish and my goal in my small way through participation as a Gamesmaker and to make that a fact. I wish ATOS, etc. well this week in their final tests before the Games commence.

HD 22/05/2012

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London2012: Jess Ennis Hurdles Nine and Not Ten!

Count 'em: Jessica Ennis (right) thought she had run a personal best but only nine hurdles had been laid out on the track Photo: PA

Astonishingly, Jessica Ennis Olympic hopeful jumped only nine hurdles at the Manchester Street games this weekend. Not that she missed one, just that they only put out nine hurdles instead of the mandatory 10! Now if Gamesmakers did that at London2012……and how come the four runners did not know it?

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London2012: Not So Lady-Like, but Girls will be Girls!

Pow: Natasha Jonas (blue) fights Sandra Brugger (Red) of Switzerland

Women Boxing at the London2012 Games. Whatever you feel about boxing let’s big it up for Nicola Adams and Natasha Jonas who have made it to London2012, the first ever women’s Olympic boxing bouts. The old trout’s tongue was difficult to handle, but these two are in a class of their own!

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London2012: Boris’s Wiff-Waff Homecoming Hopes Dashed in Doha

Not good enough: Paul Drinkhall and his British colleagues are in for a tense wait to see who will be given the nod to compete at the Games, after the six-strong team were poor in Doha Photo: GETTY IMAGES

Boris’s hopes for ‘Wiff-Waff is coming home’ are dashed when none of the six GB hopefuls made the London2012 Games after their poor showing in the World Qualifier in Doha. Just two places now await the British players at ExCel this summer.

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London2012: New Meaning to a Green Olympic Games

Tracked: Traffic controllers watched the convoy of IOC delegates and ensured they did not hit a red light, it is claimed

Looks like the powers that be will have their work cut out to keep those ‘Beamas’ moving across the capital. However, they have had plenty of practice apparently! Transport Gamesmakers you are so lucky! Never happens when HD negotiates the London streets.

 

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Acer ‘Techs Up’ for the London 2012 Games

Victory: Bolt won in 9.82 on Saturday night in Jamaica. C. Retuers

Decent article about Acer (Supplier of Computers and Servers, etc.) at the London2012 Games and their bid to gear up the human resources at each event venue.

‘The Olympic Games requires a lot of people to succeed; from the early days of planning to the last day of the closing ceremony. While Acer has been planning and been a part of the daily Olympic Games operations since 2009, it is the Games and the lead up to the Games where the majority of Acer technicians are required. Come 27th July, Acer team will count over 350 people, with 300 technicians deployed in the venues…’

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