35. Things that Baby Born after 2011
does not know
Video tape
Travel Agents
Paper maps
Long distance call
Wired phones
Yellow and White Pages:
etc..
35
36. Current Technologies My Newborn
Son Won’t Use
http://gizmodo.com/5901576/15-current-technologies-my-newborn-son-wont-use 36
37. Current Technologies My Newborn
Son Won’t Use
http://gizmodo.com/5901576/15-current-technologies-my-newborn-son-wont-use 37
41. Gartner Technology Trends 2012
Media tablets and beyond
Mobile-centric applications and interfaces
Social and contextual user experience
Application stores and marketplace
The Internet of everything
Next-generation analytics
Big data
In-memory computing
Extreme low-energy servers
Cloud computing
41
42. Media tablets and beyond
By 2015 media tablet shipments will reach
around 50% of laptop shipments
the smartphone arena, prices will fall to $75
iOS/Android will dominate the market with 80% of
tablets shipped by 2015.
The era of PC dominance with Windows as the
single platform will be replaced with a post-PC
era where Windows is one of a variety of
environments IT
Source: By Michael Cooney, Network World 42
43. Mobile-centric applications and interfaces
By 2014, there will be more than 70 billion mobile
application downloads from app stores every year
By 2014, at least half of the tools optimized for
app store application development in 2010 will
have been acquired or will have ceased to exist.
Source: By Michael Cooney, Network World 43
44. Social and contextual user experience
By 2015, 40% of the world's smartphone users
will opt in to context service providers
The tipping point here could be technology such
as near-field communications getting into more
and more devices
Source: By Michael Cooney, Network World 44
45. Application stores and marketplace
The key here is the rise of enterprise application
stores that can develop specific apps for users.
Enterprises should use a managed diversity
approach to focus app store efforts and segment
apps by risk and value.
Source: By Michael Cooney, Network World 45
46. The Internet of everything
The idea here is that we are building on
pervasive computing where cameras, sensors,
microphones, image recognition -- everything -- is
now part of the environment.
46
Source: By Michael Cooney, Network World
47. Next-generation analytics
IT can focus on developing analytics that enable
and track collaborative decision making..
Source: By Michael Cooney, Network World 47
48. Big Data
By February 2011, a Google search on "big data"
yielded 2.9 million hits, and vendors now
advertise their products as solutions to the big
data challenge.
Source: By Michael Cooney, Network World 48
49. In-memory computing
We will see huge use of flash memory in
consumer devices, entertainment devices,
equipment and other embedded IT systems.
As lower-cost -- and lower-quality -- flash is used
in the data center, software that can optimize the
use of flash and minimize the endurance cycles
becomes critical.
Source: By Michael Cooney, Network World 49
50. Extreme low-energy servers
What if you could turn 10 virtual machines in one
box into 40 slow physical servers that are tiny
and use very low amounts of energy?
Gartner says that 10%-15% of enterprise
workloads are good for this.
50
Source: By Michael Cooney, Network World
51. Cloud computing
This topic went from No. 1 last year to No. 10 this
year, but it's still an important trend.
It will become the next-generation battleground
for the likes of Google and Amazon.
Going forward, enterprise IT will be concerned
with developing hybrid private/public cloud apps,
improving security and governance.
51
Source: By Michael Cooney, Network World
52. Top 10 Gadget Trends
Nintendo Wii U
Android 4.0
iPad Mini
UltraBook
New MacAir
Kindle Fire II
iPhone 5
New iPad
Playstation Vista
Windows 8 52
66. Global smartphones annual sales will grow
about 46 percent to 687.9 million units this year
and will touch 1.05 billion units in 2014
[Credit Suisse; Apr 2012]
66
70. Mobile Payments Heat Up
Near field communications
(NFC)
U.S. made strides toward
the tech, especially with
the arrival of Google
Wallet, which allows users
to store credit and loyalty
cards on their mobile
device.
70
Source :8 Big Trends That Shaped the Mobile Phone Industry in 2011
71. QR Codes
QR codes started to pop
up more in digital and print
marketing campaigns in
2011.
For example,Sears and
Kmart integrated the
concept into their holiday
marketing initiatives.
71
Source :8 Big Trends That Shaped the Mobile Phone Industry in 2011
72. Mobile Gaming Explode
Games were the most
popular type of apps
among smartphone users,
beating out search,
maps/navigation, and
social networking and
music apps for the top
spot.
93% of all users are
willing to pay for a mobile
game.
72
Source :8 Big Trends That Shaped the Mobile Phone Industry in 2011
73. The Cloud
Apple introduced its
highly-anticipated iCloud
service.
Google also launched a
similar music service
earlier in the year,
73
Source :8 Big Trends That Shaped the Mobile Phone Industry in 2011
86. It’s no longer about smartphones
Key ecosystems are expanding across 4 screens
PC smartphone tablet smart TV
Mac iPhone iPad Apple TV
computers
Chrome Android Android Google TV
browser tablets
Windows, Windows Windows 8 Xbox
Office Phone Copyright VisionMobile 2012
87. Convergence in 2015 will be around ecosystems
and experience roaming across many types of devices
2005 2010 2015
one bill, one device, one ecosystem,
triple play 1,000s of apps 10s of screens
vision
focal
point network device ecosystems
compete price of number experience
based on service of apps roaming
Copyright VisionMobile 2012
91. Ten Cutting Edge Mobile App 2012
Location Based Services
Social Networking
Mobile Search
Mobile Commerce
Mobile Payment
Context Aware Service
Object Recognition
91
92. Ten Cutting Edge Mobile App 2012
Mobile Instant Messaging
Mobile e-mail
Mobile Video
92