Gartner identified the top 10 strategic technology trends for 2014. These included increased mobile device diversity and management challenges, growth of mobile apps and HTML5 as an enterprise application platform, expansion of the internet to connect more devices and consumer items, increased use of hybrid cloud and cloud brokering, a shift to cloud/client architecture, the rise of personal clouds, increased adoption of software-defined technologies, emulating web-scale IT practices within enterprises, proliferation of smart machines and intelligent assistants, and rapid growth of 3D printing. These trends will have significant impacts on organizations over the next three years through disruption, required investments, and risks from late adoption.
Gartner identified the top 10 strategic technology trends for 2014. These included increased mobile device diversity and management challenges, growth of mobile apps and HTML5 as an enterprise application platform, expansion of the internet to connect more devices and consumer items, increased use of hybrid cloud and cloud brokering, a shift to cloud/client architecture, the rise of personal clouds, increased adoption of software-defined technologies, emulating web-scale IT practices within enterprises, proliferation of smart machines and intelligent assistants, and rapid growth of 3D printing. These trends will have significant impacts on organizations over the next three years through disruption, required investments, and risks from late adoption.
Gartner identified the top 10 strategic technology trends for 2014. These included increased mobile device diversity and management challenges, growth of mobile apps and HTML5 as an enterprise application platform, expansion of the internet to connect more devices and consumer items, increased use of hybrid cloud and cloud brokering, a shift to cloud/client architecture, the rise of personal clouds, increased adoption of software-defined technologies, emulating web-scale IT practices within enterprises, proliferation of smart machines and intelligent assistants, and rapid growth of 3D printing. These trends will have significant impacts on organizations over the next three years through disruption, required investments, and risks from late adoption.
Gartner identified the top 10 strategic technology trends for 2014. These included increased mobile device diversity and management challenges, growth of mobile apps and HTML5 as an enterprise application platform, expansion of the internet to connect more devices and consumer items, increased use of hybrid cloud and cloud brokering, a shift to cloud/client architecture, the rise of personal clouds, increased adoption of software-defined technologies, emulating web-scale IT practices within enterprises, proliferation of smart machines and intelligent assistants, and rapid growth of 3D printing. These trends will have significant impacts on organizations over the next three years through disruption, required investments, and risks from late adoption.
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Top 10 Strategic Technology
Trends for 2014
Gartner Introduction Gartner, Inc. today highlighted the top ten technologies and trends that will be strategic for most organizations in 2014. Analysts presented their findings during Gartner Symposium/ITxpo, being held here through October 10. Gartner defines a strategic technology as one with the potential for significant impact on the enterprise in the next three years. Factors that denote significant impact include a high potential for disruption to IT or the business, the need for a major dollar investment, or the risk of being late to adopt. Top 10 Strategic Technology Trends For 2014 are : 1. Mobile Device Diversity and Management 2. Mobile Apps and Applications 3. The Internet of Everything 4. Hybrid Cloud and IT as Service Broker 5. Cloud/Client Architecture 6. The Era of Personal Cloud 7. Software Defined Anything 8. Web-Scale IT 9. Smart Machines 10. 3-D Printing 1. Mobile Device Diversity and Management Through 2018, the growing variety of devices, computing styles, user contexts and interaction paradigms will make "everything everywhere" strategies unachievable. 2. Mobile Apps and Applications
Gartner predicts that through 2014, improved JavaScript performance will begin to push HTML5 and the browser as a mainstream enterprise application development environment. Gartner recommends that developers focus on creating expanded user interface models including richer voice and video that can connect people in new and different ways. Apps will continue to grow while applications will begin to shrink 3. The Internet of Everything The Internet is expanding beyond PCs and mobile devices into enterprise assets such as field equipment, and consumer items such as cars and televisions. The problem is that most enterprises and technology vendors have yet to explore the possibilities of an expanded internet and are not operationally or organizationally ready. 4. Hybrid Cloud and IT as Service Broker Bringing together personal clouds and external private cloud services is an imperative. Enterprises should design private cloud services with a hybrid future in mind and make sure future integration/interoperability is possible. Hybrid cloud services can be composed in many ways, varying from relatively static to very dynamic. 5. Cloud/Client Architecture Cloud/client computing models are shifting. In the cloud/client architecture, the client is a rich application running on an Internet- connected device, and the server is a set of application services hosted in an increasingly elastically scalable cloud computing platform. 6. The Era of Personal Cloud The personal cloud era will mark a power shift away from devices toward services. In this new world, the specifics of devices will become less important for the organization to worry about, although the devices will still be necessary. 7. Software Defined Anything Software-defined anything (SDx) is a collective term that encapsulates the growing market momentum for improved standards for infrastructure programmability and data center interoperability driven by automation inherent to cloud computing, DevOps and fast infrastructure provisioning. 8. Web-Scale IT Web-scale IT is a pattern of global-class computing that delivers the capabilities of large cloud service providers within an enterprise IT setting by rethinking positions across several dimensions. Large cloud services providers such as Amazon, Google, Facebook, etc., are re-inventing the way IT in which IT services can be delivered. 9. Smart Machines Through 2020, the smart machine era will blossom with a proliferation of contextually aware, intelligent personal assistants, smart advisors (such as IBM Watson), advanced global industrial systems and public availability of early examples of autonomous vehicles. 10. 3-D Printing Worldwide shipments of 3D printers are expected to grow 75 percent in 2014 followed by a near doubling of unit shipments in 2015. While very expensive additive manufacturing devices have been around for 20 years, the market for devices ranging from $50,000 to $500, and with commensurate material and build capabilities, is nascent yet growing rapidly. Summary