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Linux and Open Source

Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols & Paula Rooney

Why the London Olympics is closed source

By | May 7, 2009, 7:26am PDT

Summary: This is about the fact that BT won the IT contract last year, plus its marketing rights. BT is a phone company. Phone companies are among the last hold-outs against open source.

One of the larger surprises this week is the decision by the London Olympics to ignore open source in its planned computer network.

CIO Gerry Pennell (right) gave a lot of blah-blah-blah to the Green IT conference in London, but this really has nothing to do with energy efficiency or application compatibility. (Picture from the GreenIT Web site.)

It’s all about the Adamses. (Adam Smith is on 50 pound notes issued by Clydesdale Bank, the closest thing I could find to the U.S. $100 bill.)

The Olympics are notorious for using every purchase requirement as an excuse to shake down vendors. They get stuff free, or nearly free, and in exchange the vendor gets marketing rights.

IBM was the main computer vendor during the 1996 Olympics in my hometown of Atlanta, and they hyped their participation to the max. They were still talking long after those games were over.

The lessons of those games — don’t trust new software, pay attention to public systems, have a backup plan, and don’t overpromise (as IBM did) — those lessons remain valid today.

But I find it impossible to believe that London won’t have several cloud clusters running in three years with plenty of back-end capacity to handle whatever those games can throw at them, or that virtualization can’t deliver whatever compatibility you’re after.

This is about the fact that BT won the IT contract last year, plus its marketing rights. BT is a phone company. Phone companies are among the last hold-outs against open source.

Before Mr. Pennell, or any other executive, tries to lay a cover story on anyone about anything, they might want to consider the fact that we have this thing called Google now, and reporters can find this stuff out very easily.

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Topics

Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for 30 years, a tech freelancer since 1983.

Disclosure

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a journalist, writer and part-time futurist for over 30 years.

At the present moment I run only a personal blog in addition to my ZDNet open source blog.

DanaBlankenhorn.Com has the subtitle The War Against Oil. In the past I have used it to write about political history, e-commerce, personal matters, some ideas related to open source, and The World of Always On, which is the idea of using sensors, motes and RFID to turn WiFi links into platforms for applications which live in the air.

My IRA account at Schwab holds a few tech shares, most notably some Intel and Applied Materials, but there are no open source companies in it. I don’t even own any CBS stock.

Biography

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for nearly 25 years and has covered the online world professionally since 1985. He founded the Interactive Age Daily for CMP Media, and has written for the Chicago Tribune, Advertising Age's "NetMarketing" supplement, and dozens of other publications over the years.

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It's about money
Roger Ramjet 9th May 2009
and FOSS doesn't have any! I'm sure you will see M$ ads - either they will pay BT or the OC for the privilege. Others like Adobe might also pay for privs. No FOSS can compete with that.
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Heaven Forbid
nmh 7th May 2009
From the article quoted:
BT will be responsible for providing all
communications services including those for the
workforce, venues, athletes, national Olympic
committees and the media. It will also manage
voice and data networks.


Amazing, they have awarded the telecoms
contract to a telco. Whatever next?
0 Votes
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Data as well as voice
DanaBlankenhorn 7th May 2009
BT beat out IBM for this award. They are in
charge of the data, not just the voice.
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It's the UK
nmh 8th May 2009
There isn't really any distinction between data
and voice.

BT are a network infrastructure company and
have been for many years, voice and data. The
vast majority of commercial data circuits in
the UK are supplied by BT, either direct or
through a reseller.

So I can't really imagine why they would want
to award the contract to anyone else. They'd
only have to connect in to BTs network anyway.
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21CN (new BT backbone) is Open source
Alan Smithie 8th May 2009
As far as the Chinese Military is concerned as it uses Huawei packet switchers.
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RE: Why the London Olympics is closed source
reverseswing Updated - 7th May 2009
lol @nmh
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If you're that easily surprised
tonymcs@... 7th May 2009
then you must have a ball watching the sun come up.

It should be self evident why no open source - they want it to work.
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Dinosaur Alert!
peter_erskine@... 7th May 2009
tonymcs is doing his rounds.
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Also because of gov and local authorities.
peter_erskine@... 7th May 2009
In addition to telecoms providers, the other worst offenders are the British government, the public sector, and people such as councillors. These are all Windows numpties. Its not that they resist innovation, more that they are too bone-idle to learn anything new, or be part of it. There's no-one in the UK public sector with the political will to take on good free technology. They are like putty in Microsoft's hands. And their lazy incompetency is costing all of us - the taxpayers, a lot of money.
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Why the religion? Use what works...
Roque Mocan 7th May 2009
I don't care if it is open or closed source. Choose what works for your particular needs.
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Oscar Madison and His Dell Mini 9
jabailo1 7th May 2009
That last paragraph is very telling.

The real end run around the whole rat trap is for people to go to the Olympics with Dell Mini 9's powered by Moblin, Ubuntu or Android, and blog and stream the results direct to the people.

How about everyone as a sports reporter?

Let's tear down the walls and let the Reporting begin!
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It's interesting to see comments making claims about closed-source in contrast to open-source is working code. I don't intend to debate the pros and cons, but generally it's just the same code. Both approaches can be as bad or good depending on how well the code is written.

I don't know enough about the bids to have any opinion in the matter. That the Olympics is big business with a lot of money circulating transparently and in the shadows isn't any secret, hence big corporations will flex their muscles and usually win. I don't know however if that's a reason to be upset, since it's probably of more concern that even some sport events during the games are tainted with corruption.
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It's about money
Roger Ramjet 9th May 2009
and FOSS doesn't have any! I'm sure you will see M$ ads - either they will pay BT or the OC for the privilege. Others like Adobe might also pay for privs. No FOSS can compete with that.

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