Mobile device battles: A war is looming between the Apple iOS, Google
Android and Windows 8 platforms. The implications for IT is that the
era of PC/Windows dominance is over and that admins will be forced to
support a variety of form factors and operating systems.
Mobile
applications and HTML5: Gartner is predicting a shift away from native
apps to web apps as HTML5 becomes more capable. But native apps won’t
disappear, it says, “and will always offer the best user experience and
most sophisticated features.”
Personal cloud: The personal cloud
will be “the glue that connects the web of devices [users] choose to
use during different aspects of their daily lives”, says Gartner. In
other words, this cloud-based location will be portable,
always-available place where we keep our content and access our
services.
Enterprise app
stores: Just as you can download an app to count calories or learn
Portuguese from the Apple App Store or from Google Play, Gartner
believes that by 2014, many businesses will have their own app stores
where employees can download work-related mobile apps.
The
Internet of Things: This phrase is used to describe an environment where
connected devices - from smartphones and fridges to blood-sugar level
monitors and electricity meters - are able to ‘talk’ to each other and
communicate information about their current state, using the Internet.
“The IoT will enable a wide range of new applications and services,
while raising many new challenges,” Gartner predicts.
Hybrid IT and cloud computing:
According to Gartner’s analysts, a recent survey they conducted shows
that an internal cloud services brokerage (CSB) model is emerging, as IT
teams get to grips with their responsibility for improving the
provisioning and consumption of “inherently distributed, heterogeneous
and often complex” cloud service for internal users and external business partners.
Strategic big data:
Dealing with big data is leading enterprises to abandon the concept of a
single enterprise data warehouse and moving towards multiple systems,
tied together with data services and metadata, which will become the
“logical” data warehouse.
Actionable analytics: Analytics is
increasingly delivered to users at the point of action and in context,
says Gartner. With mobile clients linked to cloud-based analytic engines
and big data preositories, users could theoretically use analysis at
the time and place of every business process action, or in other words,
“everywhere and every time”.
In-memory computing: With in-memory computing,
the execution of certain types of hours-long batch processes can be
squeezed into minutes or even seconds. That opens up the possibility of
concurrently running transactional and analytical applciations against
the same dataset, with huge implications for business innovation.
Integrated
ecosystems: Users want lower cost, simplicity and more assured security
from IT systems. Vendors want more control over the solution stack and
fatter profit margins. Gartner believes that, as a result of these
drivers, we’ll see more appliances combining hardware and software and
services; cloud-based marketplaces and brokerages where companies can
buy cloud services; and mobile vendors looking to exert various degrees
of control over the end-to-end mobile ecosystem, from the client through
to the apps.
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