8. 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
8
9. 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 9
11. Thailand Technology Trends 2012
Business Continuity
Cloud Computing
Online Consumerization
Predictive Analytic
Media Tablet and Beyonds
Mobile Centric Application, Contents & Interfaces
Social Network
High Speed Connectivity
11
24. 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]
24
28. Devices sold in Thailand 2011 is follows:
Tablet 480,000 units; Desktop 1,320,000 units and
Notebook 2,020,000 units. In 2012; The number of
Tablets sold in Thailand is expected to be
2.5 million units.
[NECTEC; Apr 2012]
28
29. Online shopping in Thailand in 2011 is 80%;
expect to grow to 93% in the next 6 months:
59% of these are mobile shopping:
[Mastercard; Apr 2012]
29
58. Is this just Hosting 2.0?
No, they have different architectures
and business model
Cloud Players Hosting Players
Hundreds of them around
the world
Only few can afford billions dollar
investment on data centers
58
Source : I’m Cloud Confused
59. Top Public Cloud Provider 2011
Amazon
Verizon/Terremark
IBM
Salesforce.com
CSC
Rackspace
Google
BlueLock
Microsoft
Joyent
59
61. Cloud Computing : SaaS
Gmail
Google Apps
Dropbox
Salesforce.com
Zoho
Microsoft Office 365
61
62. 9 Trends that Impact the Future of
Mobile Cloud Computing
Enterprise and consumer mobiles apps are getting
increasingly smart
Phone network providers are trying to climb up the
value chain.
4G LTE compatible devices are supporting bandwidth
intensive applications
The entry of iPads into the enterprise space
HTML5.
62
63. 9 Trends that Impact the Future of
Mobile Cloud Computing
The rise of mobile commerce
Fragility of mobile devices.
Increase in the worker mobility
Fragmentation of devices.
63
64. “Cloud computing will transform the IT industry
as it will alter the financial model upon
which investors look at technology providers,
and it will change vertical industries,
making the impact of the Internet on
the music industry look like a minor bleep,”.
Peter Sondergaard, senior vice president at Gartner
64
65. “At year-end 2016,
more than 50 percent of Global 1000 companies
will have stored customer-sensitive data
in the public cloud.”.
Gartner Prediction 2012
65
67. Top 5 Cloud Computing Trends
IT departments will be forever changed
Cloud security will no longer be an issue
Custom cloud computing services
Custom software development will shift towards
the cloud
Innovation
67
Source : http://www.rickscloud.com/
68. Cloud Computing
Opportunity for SME
Use ICT for their business with low
investment (no CAPEX; pay as you go)
Buy ICT as Services (subscription model)
such as SaaS
Can focus on their business
Business Continuity
New Business Opportunity
68
69. Cloud Readiness Index 2011
69
Source : Asia Cloud Computing Association: September 2011
72. Cloud Computing in Thailand
Private Cloud in Enterprise
Government Cloud Computing
More public IaaS / SaaS services
Thai Software Companies will start exploring cloud.
International software vendors will offer more SaaS
72
Source : http://www.rickscloud.com/
73. How Will Cloud Computing Impact
IT Industry?
IT Infrastructure will change dramatically
Some IT jobs may vanish altogether. New skills will be in
demand.
The way applications are developed, tested, deployed
and continuously re-factored will undergo a change
The selling and licensing of applications will change too.
Business models will change.
The architecture of applications will continue to evolve.
Data volumes will skyrocket.
Source: Dorai's Learn Log 73
105. 12 Massive Changes That Will
Transform The Software Industry
Within 5 Years
105
106. Cloud computing changes how
companies buy software.
Instead of spending a chunk of cash
buying software licenses every three to
five years, companies are buying
subscriptions and getting their software
delivered over the Internet.
Winners: Companies with cloud in their
DNA like Salesforce.com, Google Apps
and startups
Losers: Traditional software players like
Oracle, Microsoft, and SAP.
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com// 106
107. Bottoms-up marketing tactics change
which software companies buy.
Instead of spending a chunk of cash
buying software licenses every three to
five years, companies are buying
subscriptions and getting their software
delivered over the Internet.
Winners: Any company selling directly to
employees.
Losers: IT departments and sometimes
their companies.
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com// 107
108. Desktop virtualization changes how
companies deliver software.
People want to work on their own devices
and use software they like. Companies
need to control software and protect
important data. Desktop virtualization
does this. It is often called Desktop as a
Service (DaaS).
Winners: Companies like Dell, Wipro,
VMware, Red Hat, Citrix
Losers:Noone.
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com// 108
109. Windows 8's 'Metro' interface will change
how people use Windows
Everything about Windows. Microsoft has
introduced a new Metro interface that
won't work with older Windows apps and
has a totally new user interface geared
for touch.
Winners: PC makers, who will be able to
use Windows 8 to make Windows-based
tablets.
Losers:Microsoft's faithful who hate to
relearn how to use Windows.
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com// 109
110. The move to Web apps is breaking
Microsoft's monopoly
New web technologies like HTML5 mean
that great software can be written for the
browser and not a particular operating
system like Windows.
Winners: Cloud/web companies like
Google, software developers, and Linux
vendors like Red Hat and Canonical.
Losers: Microsoft and its most
established Windows software
developers, but maybe not permanently
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com// 110
111. Mobile computing changes where
software is used
Software needs to be accessible
anywhere on any device and can't be
stuck in one place anymore. People want
to be able to access work while at the
beach or soccer field
Winners: Employees. They get the freedom
to work anywhere. Device makers like Apple,
Samsung. Also network companies like
Cisco, Verizon,
Losers: Only companies stupid enough not to
see this giant wave of mobile coming.
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com// 111
112. App stores change how much people are
willing to pay for software
Apple's app store has trained consumers
to pay a lot less for software than we
used to. We're forking out $0-$10 instead
of $30-$100.
Winners: Consumers. Startups with
alternative business models: Rovio,
Zynga, and so on.
Losers: Traditional desktop software
makers who focused on Windows apps.
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com// 112
113. The death of the mouse changes the
software user interface
Touch and gesture interface is changing
how we interact with software.
Winners: Our wrists. People with
disabilities. Plus gesture-based
computing has created a whole new class
of cool apps like these Kinect Hacks.
Losers: Trackball makers and mice
makers like HP, Logitech, Microsoft, and
Apple. Traditional PC makers who haven't
yet built any tablets competitive with
Apple's iPad.
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com// 113
114. Open source changes how software is
written
Software is being written by a crowd —
anyone who wants to contribute — not
controlled by a company.
Winners: The people and companies
using the software. Open source
foundations like the Linux Foundation,
Mozilla, Apache Foundation, Outercurve.
Open source projects from companies
like Red Hat.
Losers: Traditional proprietary software
makers
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com// 114
115. Open source changes who controls
software
Many open source projects require that
the software must always remain open
and available for anyone to see the code
and change it.
Winners: The people using and
contributing to the software. Open source
companies like Red Hat and Canonical.
Losers: Proprietary software vendors
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com// 115
116. Big data changes what can be done with
software
New technologies like noSQL databases
and Hadoop allow massive amounts of
data to be collected, stored, and analyzed
inexpensively. This allows all kinds of new
software to be created.
Winners: Cloud software companies that
service consumers and have to scale big,
Enterprises that want to analyze trends but
couldn't afford old fashioned data
warehouses. Storage equipment makers
Losers: big data doesn't really replace
anything, it augments it.
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com// 116
117. Social media changes how software is
used
Social media is being embedded into
everything, from our spreadsheets to our
televisions. People want to work together,
discuss, find experts, get immediate
feedback and so on.
Winners: Facebook, LinkedIn, Google,
Yammer, file-sharing services like Box,
Salesforce, social media monitoring tools like
Lithium, Microsoft and any other company
adding social features to their software.
Losers: Most companies are finding ways to
cash in.
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com// 117