Details of the second stage of the great Olympic ticket sell-off were unveiled today.
Here are the answers to the main questions as the race to get hold of the 6.6 million tickets available to the public reopens.
Q. When do Olympic Games tickets go on sale?
A. London 2012 is putting another 2.3 million tickets on sale from 6am on June 24 to July 17.
The first 10 days of this second round sale, through to 6pm on July 3, will only be open to anyone who was left empty-handed from the first round of applications which ran from March 15 to April 26.
Q. What chance have people got of being successful in getting the tickets they have applied for?
A. This sale will be on a first-come first served basis.
People who missed out in the earlier sale will get priority but there has been huge demand which has left a lot of people "clearly disappointed", London 2012 chairman Lord Coe said.
Q. How many people have applied for tickets?
A. In total 1.9 million people made applications for 22.5 million tickets and 1.2 million of them missed out.
Only 6.6 million in total tickets are on sale to the public.
More than 50% of the 650 sessions are oversubscribed and over 1,500 ballots were carried out.
Q. What tickets are left?
A. Seats to see archery, athletics, the athletics race walk, basketball, beach volleyball, boxing, canoe sprint, mountain biking, dressage, football, fencing, handball, hockey, judo, rowing, sailing, synchronised swimming, taekwondo, table tennis, volleyball, wrestling and weightlifting are still available.
Q. What are my best chances of now seeing an event?
A. Team sports such as football, volleyball and hockey which tend to have a lot of sessions and are based in large venues are a good bet.
Of the 2.3 million batch of second round tickets, 1.7 million are for football.
Q. How much will the tickets cost?
A. Of the 2.3 million second round tickets 1.5 million will cost £50 or less and over half a million of these tickets will be priced at £20 or less. London 2012 said 60 sessions with special prices are still available. These include 33 in football and 27 in the other sports.
Q. Is it a free-for-all without limits on how many tickets can be bought per application?
A. People will be able to apply for a maximum of three sessions and six tickets per session for most sports. Football, volleyball and race walk will have larger limits.
Q. What sports have sold out already?
A. There was high demand for the obvious sports such as athletics, cycling, swimming and rowing, and there was also high demand for badminton, archery and rhythmic gymnastics.
Track cycling, triathlon, modern pentathlon, equestrian (cross country) and the majority of sessions in swimming and tennis have sold out.
Q. Will there be any other chances to buy tickets?
A. A third round of ticket sales, of whatever is remaining, is set to start from December. This could be about another million tickets.
Q. When will I find out what tickets I have bought from the original sale?
A. Most people should be able to tell by now whether they have got any of these tickets as money would have been charged from their accounts. Everyone will still have to wait up to June 24 to be told exactly what they have bought.
Q. Are refunds available if people do not want tickets?
A. Straight refunds are not available but London 2012 will launch their official resale platform early next year where people can offer their tickets for resale at face value. There is however no guarantee they will be bought.