Gartner, the US IT research firm, has identified 27 emerging technologies and predicts that eight
of these will have a transformational business impact and should be strongly
considered for adoption by technology planners in the next 10 years, according
to a report Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies,
2008. In related news, a UK media academic last month, termed the
hype surrounding Web 2.0 innovations such as social networking and the
development of internet television as "Bollocks 2.0."
"Although Web 2.0 is now entering the Trough of Disillusionment, it will
emerge within two years to have transformational impact, as companies steadily
gain more experience and success with both the technologies and the cultural
implications," said Jackie Fenn, Gartner vice president,
at the publication of the Hype report. "Later — in
between two and five years — cloud computing and service-oriented architecture (SOA),
which is moving up the Slope of Enlightenment, will deliver transformation in
terms of driving deep changes in the role and capabilities of IT. Finally,
public virtual worlds, which are suffering from disillusionment after their peak
of hype in 2007, will in the long term represent an important media channel to
support and build broader communities of interest."
At a media event in London, Patrick Barwise, emeritus
professor of management and marketing at the London Business School, defined
as "Bollocks 2.0," claims about the threat to traditional media from
innovations such as social networking and internet television.
He said human behaviour guaranteed the future of television,
despite
the downturn in advertising.
"Television is not a market going into catastrophic decline," Prof Barwise
told an audience of broadcasters, regulators and analysts at LBS. Advertising
was bad, but "it is not falling off a cliff", he said.
Barwise did acknowledge that regional newspapers and classified advertising,
are in contrast with television, suffering a serious collapse.
"People who should know better are talking about a digital revolution,
about whether or not we will all be watching 'linear television' in five
years' time. They have signed up for what I call 'Bollocks 2.0,''" Barwise
said.
He added that detailed research on the use of personal video recorders had reached
surprising conclusions. "There is next to no demand for on-demand.
The argument is wildly out of proportion about how important this is for
television."
On Google’s UK advertising revenue
overtaking commercial television service ITV, Barwise said that only about 5 per
cent of this is for brand-building display advertising, which is ITV's main
market. The other 95 per cent is for search, classified and direct-response
display advertising. The impact is therefore much greater on other media such as
local newspapers than on television.
Gartner says technologies and trends at or around the peak of the Hype Cycle in 2008 (see
Chart above) that will reach the plateau in two to five years are:
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.
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"Following the trend of the last few years, many of the new entries on this
year's Hype Cycle, including microblogging, social networking platforms and
cloud computing, are making their impact in the consumer world before they hit
businesses," Jackie Fenn said. "Other technologies that have passed the trigger
where they start to be interesting to businesses include 3-D printing, surface
computing, augmented reality and mobile robots. We expect early adopters to
start applying these in novel ways and driving new classes of application, such
as using 3-D printers to dramatically change the supply chain by creating
products and replacement parts at the point of need."
Fenn has been authoring the Hype Cycle for emerging trends for 13 years.
She said the emerging technologies Hype Cycle focuses on strategic technology
and innovative function within IT. It is the broadest aggregate of Gartner's
Hype Cycles, highlighting emerging technologies from all areas of IT that
technology planners should evaluate as part of their emerging-technology plans.
"The Hype Cycle should be used along with a planning model such as the
Priority Matrix, which highlights the technologies we believe are
worth adopting early because of their potentially high impact," Fenn said.
"However, the actual benefit will vary significantly across industries so
planners need to ascertain which of these individual opportunities relate most
closely to their organisational requirements."