Thursday, October 30, 2008

What does our future look like?

Our worlds are changing. New technologies open up many windows of opportunity and allow space for the ideas you never had.

Gartner does IT research and predicts in a recent press release that the following trends will peak in the next two to five years (remember point 32 of the Manifesto - Imitate):

Green IT — Along with broader societal pressure for environmentally sustainable solutions, IT has the opportunity — and in many cases, a requirement — to improve the "greenness" of its own activities, as well as to contribute to broader company and industry environmental initiatives.

Cloud computing — As companies seek to consume their IT services in the most cost-effective way, interest is growing in drawing a broad range of services (for example, computational power, storage and business applications) from the "cloud," rather than from on-premises equipment. Many types of technology providers are aligning themselves with this trend, with the result that confusion and hype will continue for at least another year before distinct submarkets and market leaders emerge.

Social computing platforms — Following the phenomenal success of consumer-oriented social networking sites, such as MySpace and Facebook, companies are examining the role that these sites, or their enterprise-grade equivalents, will play in future collaboration environments. The scope is also expanding to incorporate the notion of social "platforms," or environments for a broad range of developers to build on the basic application.

Video telepresence —
High-end videoconferencing systems (for example, from HP, Cisco, Teliris and others) that utilize large, high-definition (HD) displays and components to show life-size images of participants in meeting rooms or suites have proven significantly more effective than earlier generations of videoconferencing technology in providing a strong sense of in-room presence between remote participants. High cost is currently the barrier to broader adoption.

Microblogging Pioneered by Twitter (although other services such as FriendFeed or Plurk are also available), microblogging is a relatively new addition to the world of social networking, in which contributors post a stream of very short messages (fewer than 140 characters) providing information about their current activity or thoughts, which can then be subscribed to by others. The phenomenon has caught on among certain online communities, and leading-edge companies are investigating its role in enhancing other social media and channels.

Other trends...
Affordability - Computers, mobile phones, internet access are all becoming cheaper and often free.

Portability - Tech tools are smaller, lighter, better quality.

Speed - Networks are becoming faster.

Processing and capacity - Computer processing and storage capacity are improving.

Google's power - Google is gaining "galactic domination" - will there be a revolution against Google? Did you know that Google does research on neurological activity in order to make advertising as efficient as possible? Read more HERE.

TRUSTONOMICS - social currency - is trust becoming a commodity?

Some tools according to TechCrunch are...
ChaCha & Aardvark - ask any question, humans answer
docstoc - upload a document by emailing it to an address
iPhone - if you have an iPhone you get free WiFi all over the US

Some developments...
Read HERE about mobile phones not serving as a distraction from school work, but rather as an education tool. Practice for the SATs (US standardized test for college) by playing? Read more HERE.

5 comments:

Admin said...

Interesting and relevant info! Great that you present the source. We really
long to see your ideas. Let this great research inspire your next step; ideas, ideas, ideas!/Åsa and Roger

Craig McGinty said...

Portability is an interesting thought, especially when applied to the data, your data, you input into a service.

How easy is it for you to take this information out, edit it and mix it with other data streams?

And I feel this hooks into the mention of transparency, as people have spent much time inputting data about themselves but it's the service itself that generates the connections and there seems little transparency in their methods.

There will be a lot of value placed on transparency in the near future as being open and clear with data could prove very attractive to internet users.

Charlotta Åsell said...

hmmm... very interesting... am i understanding you correctly: facebook, google, etc. will have to give up on its galactic domination and reveal to us how they actually make all those connections?

Charlotta Åsell said...

that was meant for craig, btw.

Craig McGinty said...

Another way to look at it is if someone starts a service that enables people to control and manage such connections themselves, would that then challenge the likes of Facebook and Google???