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OSC Financial Conference December 14, 2010. Top Trends in Technology. Agenda and approach. Some interesting new developments Current and Emerging trends Impacts of these trends Service Expectations of a New Generation. Interesting new tools and capabilities. Social networking and space .
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OSC Financial Conference December 14, 2010 Top Trends in Technology
Agenda and approach • Some interesting new developments • Current and Emerging trends • Impacts of these trends • Service Expectations of a New Generation
Online video • Monumental Adventure • www. monumentaladventure.com • Cultural highlights of cities around the world
Communications, social networking • New Facebook messaging • www.facebook.com • Messages to friends no matter how they access Facebook • Communication portals • Archive of everything communicated
4G network access • Verizon 4G LTE service • www.verizonwireless.com • Provides 5-12 megabits per second (download) and 2-5 megabits per second (upload) • Faster than wired cable access and similar to business network access • Will be able to power WiFi via 4G
Online Office • Microsoft Office 365 • Office365.microsoft.com
Transformation underway in IT • Effects of recession • Cloud computing • New technology companies helping accelerate cloud transition • Renewed interest in mobile devices
Virtualization • Server virtualization • Storage virtualization • Network/fabric virtualization • Client systems • Application delivery can be virtualized
Cloud computing (BIG deal) • Greater interest in hosting services externally • Software-as-a-service (SaaS) • Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) • Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) • Large enterprises • Private clouds, Hybrid clouds • Small/Medium enterprises • Public clouds, real-time infrastructure
Focus on cost-saving approaches and technologies • Data Center consolidations • Federal government merging large number of Data Centers • Industry • INSA assessment (NC) • “Cloud first” • Part of new federal IT strategy • Economic value of both larger scale and commodity services
Rapid increase in mobile devices and software applications • Application architectures being refined and evolved to include mobility as key element • With Droid, iPhone, iPad, and others coming the demand for quick location/download of useful applications is soaring • Larger tablet-style devices may be coming
Software changing to take advantage of cloud and mobile devices • Days of monolithic, LAN-connected, proprietary enterprise software applications are numbered • Mobile security is becoming more important • Ability to “wipe clean” or lock mobile devices remotely • New ways to extend enterprise “LAN” for users that would previously be “off the network” • Applications will need to assume access by a far wider range of devices and user interfaces that are likely connected remotely from somewhere on the internet and probably via a wireless connection
On-demand computing • Consumer expectation that more IT can be provided and charged based on utilization, not allocation • Mixed with cloud computing, this will begin to undercut many software licensing models • Pay for what you use, not for what you might use
People within IT • Some confusion about “cloud computing” (public, private, hybrid) • Many roles will need to shift and adapt • CIO • System administrators • Application developers (starting developments using cloud environment will be important) • Support functions
People outside of IT • May be a growing focus by users on cost and transparency of IT services • Expectation of faster response and more dynamic offerings (more later) • Ability to access information quickly including use of “mash-ups” • A mash-up is a web page or application that combines data, presentation, or functionality from two or more sources to create new services • May be less confusion about “cloud”!
Cloud and Emerging economies • Ability to order services (compute, storage, backups, even applications) quickly without capital outlay is very appealing • www.myhosting.com • Integration of data may not be as important • Low cost and quick provisioning may greatly outweigh security concerns, data integration requirements, single-sign on, etc.
Application architectures will evolve (cloud, mobile) • Applications that will have a long “life” in this new IT world will need to be cloud-ready • Can scale to take advantage of more resources, some of which might be available across a hybrid cloud environment • Applications will need to recognize and support a wider array of mobile devices and access interfaces
IT Operational challenges • Manual operations will be stressed and forced to automate • Self-service, on-demand model will prevail • Dynamic sourcing pressures • IT must figure out how to add/subtract resources (compute, storage, network, etc.) as needed • Application demands will soar
Security worries • Where is my data stored in a cloud-based environment? • Is my data co-mingled with other agencies and companies? • Is the hosted or cloud environment secure and well-managed?
Application- and Business-oriented demands • App Store Effect • “I want to download these applications from the online store and them have them linked together as a new application. Can you help me?” • Based on business need (procurement, business intelligence, product design, R&D support) there will be a demand for faster and more inter-connected applications • Acceptance of large (and expensive) ERP-level software suites may not be sustainable
Emerging ways • E-mail is primary business application • Outside of work, Facebook is becoming the primary application • At some point use of social networking tools at work will become more accepted and commonplace • But what about mixing work, home, and personal interests together?
May expect more interactive support and access to information
Less delineation between social and professional communications • Facebook accounts (as an example) would contain mix of communications • Will social networking companies further recognize/address this issue? • Many employees may want to share personal and social network information in a work context
Generation Y • Expect to collaborate with work colleagues (and friends) globally • Not to be confined to a small network of contacts within their specific area • Expect to co-create and work to solve real business problems
Generation Z (net generation) • Currently 18% of world’s population • Communication takes place on the internet and mostly via online communities • Very impatient and desire instant results • Might be poor communicators
Privacy and information sharing • More openness to sharing personal information • Wide cross-linking of information in coming years will provide interesting aggregations of personal and professional information • Identity management importance will continue to grow and will leverage cross-linked information
On-demand Services and Capabilities • Now possible • More cost-effective • Fits new generation service expectations • Dynamic • Better
Exciting period ahead • Cloud wave will impact many areas, including: • Home (recent TV ads) • Enterprise environments • Small, emerging businesses • Dynamic sourcing • Applications • Infrastructure services • Greater mix of mobile demands, applications, and devices