Top 10 Strategic IT Trends For 2015
Symposium/ITxpo
is under way in Orlando. As always, their IT experts have identified what they
believe to be the top-ten information technology trends for the year ahead.
Strategic technology trends are defined as having potentially significant
impact on organizations in the next three years. Here is a summary of the
trends:
1. Computing Everywhere
With the continued advancement in smart-phone technology, Gartner
assesses that an increased emphasis on serving the needs of the mobile user in diverse contexts and
environments, as opposed to focusing on devices alone. Gartner posits that
smart-phones and wearable devices are part of a broader computing offering to
include connected screens in the workplace and in public spaces. User
experience design will be of critical importance.
2. The Internet of Things (IoT)
The Internet of Things will continue to expand, propelled by the
ubiquity of user-oriented computing. Gartner posits that this will be
replicated both in industrial and in operational contexts, as it will be the
focus of digital business products and processes. Embedding technology more
deeply will create touch points for users everywhere. This will form the
foundation of digital business.
3. 3D Printing
The cost of 3D printing will decrease in the next three years,
leading to rapid growth of the market for these low-cost machines. Industrial
use will also continue its rapid expansion. Gartner highlights that expansion
will be especially great in industrial, biomedical and consumer applications,
highlighting the extent to which this trend is real, proving that 3D printing
is a viable and cost-effective way to reduce costs through improved designs,
streamlined prototyping and short-run manufacturing.
4. Advanced, Pervasive, Invisible Analytics
Analytics
will continue to advance due to the Internet of things and the embedded devices
that trend will continue to foster. Vast pools of structured and unstructured
data inside and outside organizations will continue to be generated. Gartner
points out that every app will need to be an analytic app. The analysis also
concludes that big questions and big answers are more important than big data.
5. Context-Rich Systems
Embedded intelligence that is ubiquitous combined with pervasive analytics
will foster the development of systems that are alert and responsive to
surroundings. Gartner highlights that context-aware security is an early application of this trend,
but that others will emerge.
6. Smart Machines
Analytics combined with an understanding of context will usher in
smart machines. Advanced algorithms will lead to systems that learn for
themselves and act upon those learnings. Gartner notes that machine helpers
will continue to evolve from the existing prototypes for autonomous vehicles,
advanced robots, virtual personal assistants and smart advisors. The analysis
goes on to speculate that the smart machine era will be the most disruptive in
the history of IT.
7. Cloud/Client Architecture
Mobile computing and cloud computing continue to converge and lead
to the growth of centrally coordinated applications that can be delivered to
any device. Gartner notes that cloud computing is the foundation of elastically
scalable, self-service computing for both internally and externally facing
applications. Apps that use intelligence and storage of client device
effectively will benefit from lowering bandwidth costs, coordination and
management will be based on the cloud. The analysis goes on to note that over
time applications will evolve to support simultaneous use of multiple devices.
In the future, games and enterprise applications alike will use multiple
screens and exploit wearables and other devices to deliver an enhanced
experience.
8.
Software-Defined Infrastructure and Applications
Agile
development methods for programming of everything from infrastructure basics to
applications is essential to enable organizations to deliver the flexibility
required to make the digital business work. Software defined networking,
storage, data centers and security are maturing. Application programming
interface (API) calls render cloud services software configurable, and
applications have rich APIs to access their function and content
programmatically. Gartner notes that in order to deal with the rapidly changing
demands of digital business with demand shifts both up and down require
computing to move away from static to dynamic models.
9. Web-Scale IT
Gartner notes that more companies will think, act, and build
applications and infrastructure in the same way that technology stalwarts like
Amazon, Google GOOGL +2.17%, and Facebook do. There will be an evolution
toward web-scale IT as commercial hardware platforms embrace the new models and
cloud-optimised and software-defined methods become mainstream. Gartner notes
that the marriage of development and operations in a coordinated way (referred
to as DevOps) is the first step towards the web-scale IT.
10. Risk-Based Security and Self-Protection
Lastly, the analysis concludes that security will remain an
important consideration through this evolution toward the digital future, but
it should not be so heavy-handed as to impede progress. As many companies have
recognized that 100 percent security solutions are not feasible, this will
become more mainstream, and more sophisticated meathods of risk assessment and
risk mitigation from a process and tool perspective will be implemented.
Gartner notes that perimeter defense will be broadly recognized as inadequate,
and multi-faceted approaches will be devised. Security aware application
design, dynamic and static application security testing, and runtime
application self-protection, combined with active context-aware and adaptive
access controls will all be necessary.
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