With the London 2012 games being termed as the first "social media
games", Facebook and Twitter are buzzing with Olympics excitement more
and more. Viewers at ground level are doing their bit, soaking up the
atmosphere, while passing it on to various social networks using their
mobile devices.
But the question rises how are the mobile networks
coping up with the traffic? Telecom networks like Vodafone, Three and BT
have their reputations at stake as fans will be busy texting or
tweeting almost everything that happens in and around the games venue.
According
to the IOC officials, the peak traffic might reach 1.7 gigabits per
second. To handle this around thirty mobile phone masts have been fitted
across the arena, with 14 of them in and around the Olympic stadium
alone.
But last Saturday's men's cycling event exposed the first
chink in the armour of the mobile networks. The constant use of phones
to update Facebook and Twitter to send photos by the hundreds of
thousands of fans resulted in overloading of data networks which in turn
affected the television coverage.
The reaction though was quite unexpected as fans were asked to avoid any non-urgent text messages and tweets.
This
unexpected reaction from the IOC officials has sent the so called
"social media games" tag given to the London Olympic 2012 for a toss.
With
Twitter, Facebook and other social media sites all available in small
pocket size computers called smart phones (BlackBerry, iPhone) that
instantly deliver news; everything depends on the ability of the mobile
networks to handle the traffic.
Be it the cycling incident or the
Wembley stadium incident, one thing is for sure with the amount of money
at stake the sponsors are all but keeping their fingers crossed hoping
that the network crisis doesn't play a spoil sport.
Source: NDTV
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