Archives For predictions

IDC offers the following predictions for 2012:

  • The world will spend a whopping $2.1 trillion on tech in 2013
  • Tech will grow insanely fast in emerging countries
  • 2013 will be a make-it-or-break-it year in mobile for some vendors
  • Big IT companies will feast on smaller cloud players
  • A lot of smaller, specialized clouds will sprout up
  • Everyone will become an IT person
  • Big data will get bigger
  • The data center as we know it is over
  • Your work computer will be an ID you keep in your head

Tis the season for IT predictions and this years predictions are starting with some tried and try favorites. Cloud and mobile computing have been the “next big thing” for almost five years now and perhaps in 2013 we will start to see some of the earlier years predictions coming true. With the uptake of the iPad and other tablets we may now finally see some of these predictions come true. The ability to use ones own mobile phone or tablet to get real work done is finally a reality and this is will be putting significant pressure on IT departments to keep up.

One of the challenging predictions for IT is that “everyone will become an IT person”. What this really means is people are tired of hearing “NO” from IT and are using tools like Dropbox, Google docs and a wide assortment of free file sharing resources to get their work done without IT’s support. While this is great for the end user because they don’t have to deal with IT and can just get things done, the security risks involved in sharing corporate, government or academic data on some of these networks is significant and we may see 2013 or perhaps 2014 as the year of the renewed security threat.

IT departments that are currently facing this uncontrollable user driven shift only have themselves to blame. Cloud and mobile computing have been significant forces for many years now and there was plenty of time to develop strategies to work with Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) workers. Proper planning and proactive responses to the cloud and mobile trends would have prevented what many will see as a reactive response to this shift. Proactive planning would have also alleviated many of the security concerns that will become big news are a result of the BYOD trends that are driving change.

Perhaps the most accurate predictions is that 2013 will be a make or break year for many companies. IDC has suggested that that mobile phone and tablet companies that don’t attract interest from at least 50% of app developers won’t survive. Apple and Android are the market leaders so it is their lead to loose. Will RIM make it? Will Microsoft’s bet on Windows 8 on the phone, tablet and desktop be enough or is it too little too late? Will 2013 be the year of consolidation in the cloud and mobile space? Regardless, 2013 should prove to be an interesting and pivotal year.

Read the full Report…

The prediction for next year are coming out earlier and earlier. Gartner offers the following top 10 technologies for 2011:

  1. Cloud computing
  2. Mobile apps and media tablets
  3. Next-gen analytics
  4. Next-gen analytics
  5. Social communication and collaboration
  6. Video
  7. Context-aware computing
  8. Ubiquitous computing
  9. Storage class memory
  10. Fabric based infrastructure and computers

No surprise about the cloud and mobility–can’t have on without the other. About the only surprise in the lot is the Fabric based infrastructure and computers. The fabric idea really doen’t refer to clothing or material but rather an infrastructure that manages resources in an integrated fashion.  In plain english this means you will build servers by purchasing pools of processors and memory instead of physically swapping boxes.

Read the full article…

It is the season for all sorts of predictions for the upcoming year. The International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) offers the following:

  1. Establishing technology “as the backbone of school improvement” for student learning, professional development, and administration;
  2. Integrating technology to prepare students for careers and keep students engaged;
  3. Increasing federal funding support for technology through Enhancing Education Through Technology (EETT);
  4. Keeping educators up to date on the latest technologies to help them be more effective in their teaching environments;
  5. Increasing support for pre-service education technology programs to help produce more technologically adept teachers;
  6. Using technology to “scale improvement” and “accelerate reform”;
  7. Ensuring universal access to broadband services, which ISTE described as “critical so that students and parents have access to school assignments, grades, announcements and resources”;
  8. Developing systems and strategies that will help educators use assessment data to improve student learning;
  9. Investing in research and development focused on “innovation in teaching and learning”; and
  10. Promoting “global digital citizenship” through technology-based, cross-border collaboration.

ISTE’s complete “Top Ten in ’10” with explanations.