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Olympic tech's winners and losers

By Steven Schwankert , IDG News Service , 08/25/2008
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The flame is extinguished, and as such the games of the 2008 Olympics are closed. While the medal count is now final, a few awards have yet to be given out: those for the winners and losers when it came to technology at the games.

Beijing had three aims for the Olympics, intending to present them as "People's Olympics," "Green Olympics" and "High-tech Olympics." While the first was a clear success and the second a failure, what about the third? That and more as we look at the medal stand for IT at the Beijing Olympics:

Winner: American sports viewers. NBC presented the Olympics -- including 2,900 hours of live coverage -- in high-definition (HD). With the U.S. economic slump leading to lower prices on HDTVs, the HD Olympics, followed immediately by the NFL season, and preceded -- for the truly athletically addicted with a good satellite package -- by the Euro 2008 soccer finals, gave armchair sports fans their best reason ever to upgrade to full HD.

Loser: Wireless Beijing. In most races, competitors are disqualified for false starts. This attempt at creating wireless Internet connectivity was a complete failure. First there was no English interface. Then there was an English interface and the log-ins didn't work. Then it said something about payment but gave no option for it. And ultimately, its coverage area wasn't large enough to make a difference for laptop or Wi-Fi-toting Olympic spectators, not in a city that already had plentiful and free Wi-Fi connections, including Starbucks locations. That supply of free bandwidth makes Beijing a winner at anytime, not just during the games.

Winner: Official systems integrator Atos Origin had the goal of being "invisible" at the Olympics, for the simple reason that if they suddenly hit anyone's radar, then something was wrong. Despite being a top-level Olympic sponsor, Atos never broke the surface, maintaining its stealth status throughout, all the while processing 80 percent more data than at the 2004 Athens games.

Loser: Chinese sports viewers. Americans got high definition, Chinese viewers got high-enthusiasm, but it was standard definition all the way. Although China's major broadcasters all have HD broadcast capability, consumer uptake of HD sets in China, and available HD broadcasts are minimal. Blu-ray Disc is similarly absent in home video. There was more Olympic coverage than anyone could possibly watch, but only outside of China did it leap off the screen.

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