But let’s face it: that train is in the station. What’s next?
Analyst Bryan Hopkins gave us a peek into what Forrester thinks is next, and much of it builds on those four horseman of disruptive change. “We went a level deeper in our research by examining how today’s hot technology create platforms for future disruption,” he wrote this morning in a blog post.
Here they are, in four groups:
End user computing technologies
Next-generation devices and UIs
New sensors and new user interfaces. Think Leap Motion- Advanced collaboration and communication
Think social inside, like Yammer or or other social-inside-the-enterprise solutions - Systems of engagement
Real-time data, in everyone’s hands. Think Roambi
- Smart products
Thing that can sense, react, and communicate. Think operating system for places and buildings - In-location positioning
GPS and in-building location sensors - Machine-to-machine networks
Background intelligence on people and things. Think ReelyActive
- Smart process applications and semantics
Real business processes are a lot messier than your flow charts. Smart process apps know that.
- Advanced analytics
Smarter, more predictive data. Think Cloudera’s Impala tool for Hadoop - Pervasive BI
People need business intelligence that comes every hour, not at the end of the month - Process and data cloud services
Scalable, burstable, and cheap computing capability. PaaS, BaaS, etc.
- Big data platforms
Infrastructure to handle big data and high speed … and use all that data you’ve been uselessly storing - Breakthrough storage and compute
Yes, hardware may still be necessary, even if you’re never going to be like Google - Software-defined infrastructure
Software that dynamically routes your networking and data center capabilities - Cloud application frameworks
Technologies for deploying and running distributed apps in the cloud, like, perhaps, a multi-continent-spanning database - New identity and trust models
New federated trust and identity models for a changing world of jobs and careers … and maybe even killing all usernames and passwords
If you want a good look at the future of end user computing technologies and sensor and remote computing devices, check winning Kickstarter and IndieGoGo campaigns in the technology and gadget categories. And for a picture of the future for the last two groups above, process data management and infrastructure and application platforms, look at Google and Facebook.
photo credit: ginnerobot via photopin cc
Filed under: Big Data, Business, Cloud, Enterprise, Mobile, VentureBeat
No comments:
Post a Comment