Technology
Trends of 2012
The consumer
technology market is affecting the corporate world
Welcome to my
annual technology trends column, where I wade through the bits and bytes of the
computerized world and identify the stories that will define the coming year. A
tall order, indeed, that I usually meet by pointing to the trends that will
affect our corporate lives.
But this year
I’m covering the consumer angle as well. Why? Because trends in the
consumer market are affecting the corporate world.
Trend #1:
Kindle Lights a Fire
One year ago I
said that 2011 would be the Year of the Tablets. Not one tablet, many tablets.
But especially Apple’s iPad.
Turns out I was
right. You could argue that 2011 was the Year of the iPad, but the past year
taught all tablet makers one important lesson: price matters.
When
Hewlett-Packard held a fire sale to rid itself of the TouchPad, it sold more
units than Apple’s almighty product, albeit at a deeply discounted price.
Taking note,
Amazon released a new Kindle e-reader, the Kindle Fire, just in time for the
holiday season, featuring Google Android, a web browser and a host of apps, all
at less than the cost it takes to produce one. But unlike any tablet maker
other than Apple, Amazon has its own store of books, movies and videos, plus
distribution agreements with movie studios, record labels and publishing
houses.
That’s why the
Kindle Fire is subsidized. It goes back to the Gillette (or Crest) model. Give
someone a razor (or a toothbrush) and you can sell them shaving cream (or
toothpaste) for life. Amazon hopes to sell people media content for life. The
result? The personal tablet market has split into two camps: the high-end Apple
iPad and the low-end Kindle Fire.
So what does
this mean for the business market? My prediction for 2012: iPads and Fires will
start appearing in your office, with employees wanting to use them for
business.
The tough part
is that both devices are engineered for consumers rather than the corporate
market. But as long as Apple and Amazon can subsidize their hardware via
consumer-based media content, they might just corner the corporate market.
Trend #2:
Content to the Clouds
Where do you
store your digital music, pictures, books and movies? 10 years ago you stored
them on your personal computer, right? But today you store them on a variety of
gadgets — your cellphone, your tablet, your laptop, your mobile listening
device.
Steve Jobs
called this online repository of data a “digital hub,” and, as he explained to
Walter Isaacson, his biographer, “over the next few years, the hub is going to
move from your computer into the cloud.”
The fact is,
consumers are getting more and more demanding. They want their content — music,
pictures, books and movies — wherever and whenever they feel like it. So I
predict that another major trend of 2012 will be the move of consumer content
to the clouds. Because even if you’re not an Apple user, the move to the clouds
is coming no matter whose hardware you use.
Apple is
already marketing cloud computing to its customers (“Your content. On all your
devices.”) through the iCloud, promising “automatic, effortless, and seamless”
integration between mobile devices.
Surprisingly,
consumers don’t seem overly concerned about their privacy or the security of
their data — they just assume that their cloud provider will protect their
information.
But the
corporate world is different. Business does not and will not take security for
granted. As consumer demand drives the proliferation of cloud storage services,
companies continue to explore the benefits of data storage and the software as
a service model (SaaS, sometimes called “software on demand”), while others are
looking for cloud-based environments that resemble a desktop computer, and are
looking at the platform as a service model (PaaS).
Others still
are willing to go further and want the whole underlying connection of servers,
databases and network systems available as infrastructure as a service,
or IaaS.
But there’s no
doubt in my mind that, as consumers adjust to the concept of storing and
managing their personal data in an environment that, strictly speaking, is not
their own, our acceptance of a digital hub in the clouds will continue to drive
the further adoption and enhancement of cloud computing in the corporate
sector.
Trend #3:
Corporate Security & Consumers
In 2011, a new
type of cyberattack, Advanced Persistent Threat (APT), came to the forefront.
APTs target organizations. Their perpetrators learn everything about their
target and its employees in order to masquerade as them electronically and
attack their defences and access controls. The end goal is to steal privileged
information about customers, clients or trade secrets.
PWC just
released its Global State of Information Security Survey for 2012, in which it
surveyed retail and consumer industry executives for feedback on their
information security practices. It found that, while executives were not
confident about their security systems, a majority of respondents “revealed
that
their
organization’s security policy does not address APT, nor do they have the
capabilities and tools to combat it.”
Welcome to 2012.
The Year of Tablets, Clouds and Persistent Threats.
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