Friday Dec 21, 2007
Predictions for 2008 using my del.icio.us tag cloud
Its that time of year, when writing about your predictions for 2008 is all the rage. I've been tagging some by others on del.icio.us with prediction2008.
I've included my current del.licio.us tags in descending order of importance. It highlights the areas that I have had an active interest in either for current work or for research of future activities. So i've used them as the subjects for my predictions for 2008.
my del.icio.us tags
- SaaS
- business
- web2.0
- ibm
- soa
- via:aqualung
- development
- collaboration
- innovation
- Microsoft
- architecture
- blog
- Java
- lotus+connections
- opensource
SaaS
Software as a Service will continue to become mainstream , as skilled resources become harder to find, internet connectivity latency decreases with the corresponding increase in bandwidth capacity. Wall Street will be even more attracted to the SaaS recurring pricing models, such that it will provide a higher potential exit price for Venture Capital backed organisations. Thus driving high rates of entrepreneurship and innovation in the SaaS sector then in comparison to traditional on-premise software delivery companies.
Business
Will continue to see their core Information Technology assets as a cost of doing business and will treat it as a commodity component. IT Consultants will find new ways to work with business, that is more closely aligned to business innovation within their specific industry. Nothing that new here, but internal IT skills will become less IT technical and more analytics driven. Marketing departments will take on more responsibility for analytics and data warehousing to improve marketing ROI.
Local markets in the developed world will continue to become a deeper shade of "red", as competition increases, driving exploration of new markets for growth through volume and innovation in delivery and execution.
Web2.0
Is a technical label, that has been assigned to represent a change of thinking regarding memes around a social and networked world. It has signaled the rise of the long tail, being that of the boutique network connected micro-economy. Organisations in 2008, will reevaluate their methods of engaging with the market, and the micro-economy, as the number of larger and mid tiered firms dissipate through M&As.
IBM
IBM will embrace cloud computing (eg blue cloud) but have difficulties in engaging with customers in this area; whilst it is still perceived internally as a hardware and people services company. Margins for resellers, will continue to dwindle (hardware and software) as IBM software sales, outside of SMB, finally exceed hardware sales and thus moves focus from hardware. IBM will continue to work on, but won't formulate wining strategies in 2008, to take market spend from Microsoft in the SMB software area. IBM's sales force in 2008, focused on on-premise engagement will have difficulties with the off-premise SaaS nature of cloud computing. In 2008, there will be some high profile success stories publicized for Blue Cloud.
SOA
Service Oriented Architecture will continue to drive new systems and rationalisation of existing within the larger enterprises. Adoption of the SOA Architecture Style within enterprises will increase. However, unless machine generated, WS-* style service adoption will decrease. Skilled IT Architects capable of service decomposition between business services and technical services will be in short supply for 2008.
SOA will continue to drive the demand for new on-premise middleware products. A number of new products will emerge in 2008, possible based on SCA/SDO, that allow utilisation of multiple programming languages and development paradigms.
via:aqualung
Thanks Ric
lots of great material. Think more will come, including lots of great riffs and conversations. In 2008, I predict Ric will be writing more blog entries.
Development
The Art of Developing computer systems will start to influence education in the area of Computer Science and Software Engineering. Iterative agile development processes will continue to be favored over waterfall methodologies. Some procurement departments will explore contracts that allow iterative development methodologies, but this will still not be the norm in 2008. This disconnect between what developers do and what contracts state will continue.
There will be increased interest in scripting languages such as Python and Ruby and further exploration of languages or changes to existing languages to support parallel computing. Functional languages such as ErLang, Haskell and OCaml will gain more of the spotlight.
Google will continue to influence developers through its Google Code. Google SaaS based services will influence development approaches and continue to play havoc with administrators who favor closed firewalls and block external high use URLs. Google will utilise more personal profile data to improve search results and at the same time use it to increase Ad revenue from targeted advertising.
Smaller SMBs will gain trust in Google and really start to question the value/cost of maintaining on-premise infrastructure.
Collaboration
Social software will gain some traction in more forward thinking organisations but it will still be an enathma to command and control based management. New products will be developed that utilise analytics in conjunction with project management methodologies to form groups/teams for delivery of specific deliverables based on a continuously moving project plan (isn't this what we do anyway manually?).
Innovation
Business will seek innovation to be internally driven and not from vendors, but will struggle with out outside influence. Australia will invest heavily in building infrastructure to support exporting of innovation overseas.
Microsoft
Will recover the market position lost with WindowsVista . SaaS (or as they call it Software plus Services) will continue to attract media spotlight as Microsoft seeks to gain new revenue streams and move focus from on-premise software. Huge internal debates over this will continue with little leakages, every now and then, to the market over the 2008 year. Headlines may move from Google vs Microsoft to IBM vs Microsoft, if Blue Cloud is a success.
Architecture
IT architecture will be important in organisations, as an enabler of structure. Many more titles containing the term Architecture will evolve in the 2008 year. IT Architects (of whatever title) will continue to find new ways of explaining the value of this abstract thinking to business and further consolidation of this knowledge will occur on the internet, such as at IASA.
Blog
PR agencies will learn how to influence the blogosphere. The informal citizen journalist will continue to eat into the revenues of traditional print media. Blogging in conjunction with bookmarking will become the preferred means over google to find "trusted" content and advice.
Java
This is the pinnacle year for Java, the programming language, in the enterprise world. As concurrent computing needs are accelerated through the multi-core focus of CPU vendors, it may be perceived that the effort to modify the Java language specifications is higher then the benefits gained by using other programming languages. SOA standards, such as SCA and SDO, are evolving to be language neutral, this will reduce the reliance on Java in enterprise middleware products.
Lotus Connections
This is an interesting product, that shows the possibilities of internet based software behind the firewall. The 2007 year saw, too many new products evolve from IBM in my view, thus there may be in 2008, a consolidation of products to compete against Microsoft Office Sharepoint Services in the SMB space. My blog receives a large number of hits for "sharepoint vs websphere portal" searches on google, so it wouldn't surprise me if Lotus Connections is rolled into WebSphere Portal Express for the SMB market.
Open Source
Will still be here at the end of 2008. Microsoft will continue to push new standards based around its technology stack. The next killer app may emerge if usability and visual issues can be addressed. Has Windows Vista opened the door for the Linux desktops? We'll see this time next year.
Tags business collaboration saas development architecture opensource blog del.icio.us web2.0 lotus+connections soa ibm google prediction2008 tag microsoft java cloud | Comments 0
Tuesday Dec 18, 2007
Our 2008 styled web site
We've finally done it and released the new web site http://www.toasttechnology.com.au . This is our new one page design that I talked about in a previous entry - Trends for 2008 corporate web sites. We have put key messages about our company on that page and included cool things from the MooTools tool kit and stuff from Google Code like the Google AJAX Feed API so its got a strong Web 2.0 focus.
Now we have tried to take into account those corporate users that don't have Flash (yes, they do exist) by having a fall back image for them. The page does take a little longer to load then our previous front page but the number of dial up users accessing our old site is minimal.
Many thanks to Alex, Ric and Claire for their valuable help with this exercise
.
One key thing we have done, is linked in a wiki server at http://wiki.toasttechnology.com.au . The wiki is open to any person who registers to read/write pages. As such we are going to actively seek for organisations that we work with and partner with to update content directly. I think this is going to be the real challenge!
Tags web mootools google web2.0 wiki brochure ajax flash | Comments 0
Monday Apr 23, 2007
How important is Microsoft Office in your business day?
People who know me, know that I have be preparing for a dramatically reduced Microsoft business world. Don't get me wrong, I think Microsoft has their place, I'm just not certain for how much longer. We don't use Microsoft Exchange or Outlook and do not run any servers that run Microsoft operating systems. This has caused me grief as I have not been able to deploy some IBM software like Lotus Sametime, apparently the Linux Intel version is not too far away.
On the desktop, I'm on the verge of completely cutting over to Open Office, as it performs over 95% of the activities that in general I need to do. Have been checking out the office capabilities in the new Lotus Notes 8
client, I believe IBM has called them "Productivity Editors". Was on the verge of completely cutting over to a Linux desktop, but the local government here in South Australia, brought in an e-Projects Panel that required the use of some terrible software that would only run on a Windows desktop. At least they asked for all documents to be submitted in Adobe PDF format.
With the advent of other Web 2.0 mash up and enterprise social software tools, I suspect that Microsoft Office has become irrelevant!
How much of your day is now spent in Microsoft Office?
Tags ibm web2.0 microsoft | Comments 0
