Organizers of the 2012 Olympics have stripped Nortel as official networking supplier and replaced it with Cisco.
Nortel was one of seven "tier-one" sponsors of the London Games in a deal reported to be worth $65 million.
The company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in January and has reached an agreement to sell its CDMA and LTE assets to Nokia Siemens.
London 2012 organizers LOCOG said on Friday Cisco had been appointed a "tier two" networking sponsor deal, starting immediately.
London 2012 CEO Paul Deighton said the games\' "entire network infrastructure" had been impacted by Nortel\'s decision to break itself up.
"We part with Nortel on good terms," he said. "This is in no way a reflection of their capabilities - this is all about meeting our fixed deadlines."
The London games has seven worldwide sponsors, including ICT firms Acer, Atos Origin, Panasonic and Samsung, as well as seven tier-one suppliers, three tier-two and ten tier-three suppliers.
Related content
- Optus to build network for 2018 Commonwealth Games
- Webwire: India's telecom policy due April; Cisco appeals MS-Skype deal
- Webwire: Nortel networks breached for years; Proview seeks iPad export ban
- Webwire: Ericsson sued for $330m; Cisco Q2 profit grows 44%
- Webwire: EC probing Samsung patent suits; Carrier rejects Apple's iPhone terms