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February 22nd, 2010 by Dan Howe

Scoring a green medal for London 2012

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Did you catch any of the Olympic Games this weekend?

Aside from Great Britain’s Gold medal in women’s skeleton, the Olympics are interesting to watch if only just to see the result of the technology advancements that are pushing athletes further, faster and stronger. Being the first Olympics of this decade, the winter games are setting a benchmark for our own upcoming 2012 summer games here in London. The technological advancements being used in Vancouver act as a preview of what’s to come in London 2012.

It is not just the athletes being made more efficient. The Olympics themselves are using technology to become state-of-the-art and nowhere is that more obvious than in sustainability. An exciting tech advancement is the Venue Energy Tracker from Speed client, Pulse Energy. Their software monitors and analyses energy use in Olympic buildings, highlighting areas where energy consumption can be reduced and then making this information available online, live. Dashboards of different venues, found at www.venueenergytracker.com, display real-time electrical consumption along with showing savings through sustainable practices. The games are on course to save approximately 18 gigawatt hours of electricity – enought to power more than 1,600 homes for an entire year.

With the London 2012 Games aiming to be the greenest ever, monitoring energy consumption at Vancouver is important as it is the first time it has ever been done at the Olympics, providing London with a benchmark for comparison.

Britain may not walk away from this year’s games with many medals, but we will leave with an understanding of how green we need to make our Olympics, setting a challenge London is ready to step up to.

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December 22nd, 2009 by Lisa Francis

Daily News: 22/12

The London Stock Exchange takes control of Turquoise
The London Stock Exchange is taking over competitor Turquoise and the platform is set to be migrated to its Millennium IT trading platform. The deal, which involves no money changing hands, will see the technology used by Turquoise dropped.

Computing.co.uk – Banking sector set for IT hiring spree in 2010

The banking, telecoms and software sectors will be the key areas for IT employment in 2010, according to new research from technology recruitment organisation The IT Job Board.

BBC – BT to complete super-fast broadband network by 2012
BT’s superfast broadband network will be completed in time for the 2012 Olympic Games, the firm has announced.

BBC – India survey says Facebook affects productivity

Indian firms are losing productivity because office staff spend too long on social networking sites, a survey says.

FT.com – Avatar takes $242m globally in first weekend

Hollywood’s heavy investment in 3D has passed it s biggest test yet, analysts and cinema executives said this week, as they tallied the takings from Avatar, James Cameron’s 3D epic.

The Register – Microsoft AV advice may aid attackers, researcher warns
A security researcher is taking Microsoft to task for advising customers to exclude certain files and folders from anti-virus scanning, arguing the practice could be exploited by pushers of malware.

Guardian – Vodafone to offer iPhone from January

Vodafone will start selling the iPhone in Britain next month, offering customers a free handset for £35 a month on a two-year contract, disappointing consumers hoping for a high-street price war over the device.