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Commentary Let the Cloudwashing Continue...
...And Other Big Themes for 2012
By: Roger Strukhoff
Dec. 28, 2011 08:00 AM
"Cloud computing is expected to mature and become a mainstream technology for businesses in Asia-Pacific by 2015," according to a new forecast from Frost & Sullivan. Meanwhile, Joe McKendrick writes in Forbes that "'cloud' will begin to fade as a differentiating term - because it will just be the way we do things." I believe that 2011 will be viewed in retrospect as Year Zero of cloud computing, with 2012 seen as Year One. Yet I also agree with the opinions above, primarily because they relate to my first theme of 2012. In all, I've identified five themes for 2012, the overarching ideas that will frame discussions throughout the year. I. Let the Cloudwashing Continue It is surely even more aggravating when said legacy vendors define the cloud however they please, then make the recursive argument that they can define cloud as they want because there's no precise definition of cloud. Yet, we should consider the customer-IT, which is famous for furious pushback against the latest magical elixir, whether it's client-server, AJAX, SOA, or BPM. Cloud is just the latest in an endless buzzword stream IT buyers, developers, and deployers must navigate. By tagging certain of their assets as cloud, the legacy vendors are making it easier for IT to accept the term. In doing so, they will no doubt learn which approaches fly best in their enterprises. The bolder ones will gravitate towards the things we might label as "more cloudy." But in a world where IT is faced with an either/or legacy-or-cloud decision, it's not going to venture far into the sky. IT will not allow vendors who claim philosophical purity to cram things down their throats. Cloud computing will be adopted more quickly, and will become "the way we do things" because legacy vendors are easing the transition-let's call it cloudeasing rather than cloudwashing. II. Big Data Redefined Ubiquitous computing has turned into ubiquitous telemetry and data collection, and the new Big Data has emerged, along for the ride. Cloud computing and Big Data are part of each other's Boolean circles, and will become ever more so as their respective definitions continue to loosen. Tell me, what is your Big Data problem, and to whom are you going to turn to solve it? The argument runs along the lines of Facebook (and to some degree, Twitter, LinkedIn, and maybe Google+) have blotted out the sun; there is no room left for another damned social-media company. But to me, this argument is analogous to the idea that everybody in Europe and North America loved chocolate candy when it was first introduced in the 19th century, and there was no room for innovation after about 1900. Even today there's room for a bitchin' new type of candy bar. More targeted social ideas-whether activity-based, or built around a specific business usage-should gain traction, especially as they now have not only the desktop, but a proliferation of mobile devices through which they can reach people 24/7/365. IV. The Year of Apping Dangerously It's easy enough to offer profound insights such as "RIM is dead," "W7 Phones have no chance," "Droid's divergence is its fatal flaw," or "Apple has lost its edge." Much harder to be working somewhere within this massive ecosystem trying to make things happen while blotting out all the white noise. Who knows, maybe the two RIM guys will move to an ashram, see a bunch of gods, and come back with renewed religious fervor. Maybe a real keyboard will make a comeback. Maybe Google will buy Nokia in a hostile takeover. Maybe Samsung will buy Microsoft (although unlikely in an election year). Maybe webOS will make a miraculous, open-sourced recovery. Who knows? Nobody expected the Spanish Inquisition. We do know that smartphone growth will continue. The questions will be, what's the danger in buying a type of product that might be discontinued soon, and where do developers place their bets? Within this growth, it seems there will be a market for ultra-high-end devices if the vendors don't get all OWS-squeamish about things, and a very large low-end to middle market in developing nations. Synopsizing the Bottom-of-the-Pyramid strategy, poor people like nice stuff, too. Smartphone and tablets are not only nice, they provide a digital lifeline to friends, family, and the world. Which leads to the final theme... V. IT's Eternal Disruption It seems clear that these events were not Twitter or Facebook Revolutions, but it seems equally clear that IT-in the guise of smart devices, the software that gives them life, and bandwidth-will continue to be a disruptive force. Be warned that said disruption is agnostic, and could happen in any nation that is facing issues of economic instability and perceived inequitability. In other words, it could happen in any nation. The days of IT trends hitting the US first, Western Europe 18 months later, Japan another two years later--and the rest of the world be damned--are over. The latest cool stuff gets into the hands of people almost simultaneously throughout the world today, and those hands are often connected to unhappy people. A generation ago, people in so-called third-world countries would see the wealth of the West and aspire to it someday. Today, people in developing and developed countries alike aspire to getting what they want now, using the powerful tools our industry has created over the past decade. Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
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