NFL's IT Chief Gears Up For His 25th Super Bowl 82
BobB-nw writes with this excerpt from NetworkWorld:
"NFL IT guru David Port claims he doesn't have a favorite football team, but on Sunday he'll be working his 25th Super Bowl. As the league's vice president of information technology, Port and his IT staff are responsible for building a temporary network to support NFL staff and thousands of journalists during Super Bowl week. Port starts preparing for each Super Bowl two years in advance, working with the city and venues where IT operations and media professionals will be based. More intensive planning starts about 11 months before the big game. Port explained that the NFL essentially built a small data center with IBM blade servers at the temporary headquarters in a local Marriott near the Super Bowl site. 'We built out an infrastructure with approximately 300 computers, PCs and laptops, and wired and wireless networks that are used for NFL core operations, for game production and business operations. Much of it is also for media,' Port said."
CNet is running a related story about the technology behind the Super Bowl, focusing on some of the visual effects viewers will see, as well as the hardware that makes everything happen.
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As I have no mod points, I only say this: /b/.
Go back to
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Interested in Superbore? Nope.
Roll on the Six Nations next weekend. No special teams there....
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You can skip that crap, better watch Tri Nations mid year. To prepare for it, tune into Super 14 second weekend from today.
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You are not the only uncaring one. Really.
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Ive noticed the same thing as well. However, Im still more interested in Soccer, specifically the English Premier League.
Dave is a great guy (Score:5, Interesting)
Having personally worked with him on SBXL, I can tell you that Dave is a great guy who knows what he's doing. The level of planning is amazing, not to mention the equipment they travel. They bring their own phone network (refusing to use even brand new state-of-the-art switches the house may own), a ridiculous amount of fiber, have fatter data pipes than some small countries, and are completely flexible to individual needs. It's completely night-and-day from any other sports event (including the World Series, Stanley Cup, and the Final Four).
He also has a bunch of really cool toys. Between him and the FCC, they can pinpoint an unlicensed RF transmitter within 5 feet in under 3 minutes and have it shut down. And yes, this happens multiple times in each super bowl, usually with foreign media.
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Wow, I was going to skip the Super Bowl, but you're making it sound kind of interesting.
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You obviously do not realize that here in the US most universities would not exist without the income generated by their football(US) teams.
Re:Dave is a great guy (Score:5, Interesting)
You obviously do not realize that here in the US most universities would not exist without the income generated by their football(US) teams.
Actually, most, if not all, college athletic depts. lose money. See "Beer and Circus" or any of the other books on the subject. They use some real creative accounting to hide this.
Re:Dave is a great guy (Score:5, Insightful)
college football (Score:2)
the football programs lose money
True at some, but certainly not all, schools. My alma mater made money on football, basketball, and hockey, while losing money on the rest. Of course it helps to have a team that is at least slightly well-regarded, and to be in a big conference.
Whereas if you pay millions to your football staff, and post regular losing records, your odds of turning a profit are almost nil.
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The books might show that they lose money, but if you look at what it costs to be allowed to buy a ticket at some schools, this is far from the truth. The minimum 'donation' for my father's football tickets comes to about 300 a game. These are 30 dollar tickets. (Which he scalped for 600 a piece _).
On the other hand, this is a very successful athletic program, so its possible your claim that most (but not all) schools lose money is true.
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Not even close, universities are huge. (Score:2)
You obviously do not realize that here in the US most universities would not exist without the income generated by their football(US) teams.
Yeah, that would make a lot of sense... if the yearly operating budget for a large public university wasn't measured in billions of dollars. Major universities are huge institutions, athletic revenues are a drop in the bucket.
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Handheld, "body block" is as good or better than a directional antenna. Only one null, and no big things to carry.
Mobile, you'll have an array and some DSP to get that nice arrow on your dash. Combine two cars or just multiple measurements over time with GPS and you can get the location before you even arrive.
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I Worked for Dave and crew at the last Superbowl in Phoenix. I was the wireless vendor that the Superbowl hired for the outdoor wireless. Everything that Controlio says is true. He is a great guy, they have there act together and he is a good man to work for. He led the entire site from weeks before to the week after. Three weeks later I received a hand written thank you card and a gift from Dave. In a world of thankless days, I have kept the thank you note on my desk from Dave Port, He seems to have this g
Color me unimpressed (Score:2)
It takes him two years? Wow. Not.
MLB does this with just a few days of notice for the Division and League playoffs and a week or so for the Series.
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Doesn't change the facts, no matter how you spin it. He takes two years, MLB does it multiple times in the span of six weeks. No matter how many people watch it, there's still the same number of networks, newspapers, etc... etc...
I knew it! (Score:1, Funny)
Port starts preparing for each Super Bowl two years in advance...
I just knew football was rigged!
Pointless article (Score:4, Informative)
Can I please get back the 5 minutes that I spent reading the article?. he article had no details about the uplink to the internet/ISP. No details as to the number of hits the web server can handle. No information (not even looking for details) about the firewall.. just a pointless article.
Actually... (Score:3, Informative)
Offhand I can say that the NFL's needs are FAR greater in respect to media needs during the Superbowl as opposed to the World Series, but just in case, I found a link [ning.com] in about 5 seconds on Google.
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I want to add a few things I have noticed. In the world series, you can lose one game by a very large margin, say 20, and still be the winner. And if the teams are equally good, you have SEVEN! games over which the decision is made. In the superbowl, the game will be finished today. That is it, no do over, no bad day. If you want to watch the superbowl, it is one day and one day only. The first few games of the world series aren't interesting to many, and if one team is better, the later games aren't
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It would be nice if your article supported your claim. But it not only fails to support it, it utterly and completely fails to address IT needs at all. (Here's a hint for you: The number of people watching has zip point zero to do with the IT infrastructure required - the same networks, newspapers, magazines, etc... are at both.)
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What the hell is a Super Bowl?
It's like...y'know...the thing after Net 2.0 and cloud-computing or something. Information gets stored in a pig-bladder and thrown around between nodes...or something...
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Not true. It's really going to be a 30-second showing of Last Measure, complete with the "Hey everybody, I'm looking at gay porno!" soundtrack.
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It is wrong to tease new linux users with distros that do not exist. I took valuable time from my life to look for this reference only to discover that ninnle linux is a red herring, a joke, a hoax about as stupid as "pull my finger".
If it exists, post a link, cite an article with a link, do something other the re-enforce a bad meme.
Why did I search? Because *as* a new linux user I am always interested if the next distro is better, easier, more fun to play with then the last one I tried (or Ubuntu, my cur
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Gentoo's better and more fun to play with.
It's not easier than Ubuntu unless the topic is compiling.
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Everyone knows MythicaLinux rocks the socks off Ninnle Linux anyway. Unless you have NVIDIA graphics, of course.
No Ads (Score:2)
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(Although probably not this year, as companies are [or should be] looking for ways to cut back on expenses.)
FUCK THAT. If your company is doing well enough, and thinks that investing in some high profile advertising will increase their profits, more power to em.
This attitude that we should all be looking for ways to cut back is just fear mongering bullshit. If no one takes risks and tries something new different or risky, then progress is retarded. You want the economy to revive? Correct the problems in the laws and then sit back and let business digest the changes. After a cycle of digestion, investment and
Re:No Ads (Score:5, Insightful)
So why do so many Americans watch it? The ads, parties, beer, salted snacks, and gambling. Don't get me wrong, Americans love football, but Super Bowl Sunday has evolved into a national holiday. Football is as important to the Super Bowl as Jesus is to Christmas.
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I don't know about everyone else, but this doesn't seem so insightful after the game last night.
I mean, your second point is right, but the game was far from unwatchable.
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Do they really show it live, which would be the middle of the night in England? Otherwise, if it's taped and aired the next day they could just edit it down to a more reasonable length.
I also can't see them showing the ads too. The ads are copyrighted so it's not like they can just rebroadcast them. While many companies probably wouldn't mind the free airtime, it would probably still be a mess to secure all the rights and do everything proper.
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As a Brit, could I please beg you to please find a way to get NFL out of the UK? It's the most tedious, inane sport I've ever had the misfortune to tune into from time to time. Idiotic commentators calling players 'superman' etc. don't help. There are SO many more entertaining, worthy sports that don't get coverage that it's really quite depressing that the BBC has started to cover this utter shit.
Re:No Ads (Score:4, Insightful)
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It's the most tedious, inane sport I've ever had the misfortune to tune into from time to time.
How have you managed to live in the UK and not accidentally tuned into a cricket match?
Oblig. Simpsons Ref. (Score:2)
"Holds it...holds it....HOLDS IT!"
Great name (Score:1)
Although the reference is nerdy, he has a great name for a guy in charge of networking.
At Super Bowl - How is Power Backup Handled? (Score:2)
I've long been curious as to whether major stadiums truly have reliable backup power? I know from first-hand experience many minor league stadiums certainly don't.
It would be interesting to read what they do (or don't do) to handle unexpected power interruptions at the Super Bowl.
While I figure the IT folks have their end covered, what about the TV folks (I assume they run their own power?), and more to the point, the field lighting and other equipment in the stadium itself, which draw massive amounts of po
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"Routine" shows will run off stadium power since it's cheaper. I've got a couple stories of this backfiring, one of which I was present for... First story is a major entertainment awards show, the truck required 200 Amps of service, so that's
outsource the superbowl (Score:3, Funny)
Anyway, go Ben Graham - 1st Australian to play in a superbowl final.
Next year, how about you outsource all the tech to Putin's Russia. You know, just as an international gesture of goodwill ... MalwareBowl
nice game (Score:1)