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Thursday, November 25, 2004
Top 10 Trends in 10 Industries
WSJ has a special report identifying key trends. The titles give an indication:
The Mobile Web
Russell Beattie writes: "Of course people are going to want to access the web from their mobile phones. Why wouldn't they? They're not going to want to be walled off in some mobile-ghetto, but rather have the full-on, do everything I can do from my desktop on my mobile phone, access to the web....I don't see the future as one where there are different mini-webs per device or proprietary ways of accessing content and services, but a multi-device norm which adds some pressure to the webmasters out there, but forces a shift to web standards to meet the demand of billions of data-connected handsets all sporting standard minibrowsers." Russell also points to the W3C's Mobile Web Initiative.
ActiveGrid
Phil Wainewright points to ActiveGrid which is focused on Transaction Grid Computing. from their press release:
Phil adds: "Of course, calling its platform an application server is something of a marketing ploy since, as Peter has explained, an application server is the last thing you need. What ActiveGrid is really providing is a highly tuned 'text pump' to occupy the fabric/bus space in a transaction-intensive enterprise data center. It's an interesting proposition, and one that highlights the immensely disruptive potential of XML standards-based services architectures. Some combination of XML web services grid/mesh/fabric/bus, once we all get through the experimentation stage and begin to agree on what works best, is going to obsolete every previous generation of integration middleware — and that includes J2EE application servers."
Cellphone TV
Technology Review writes:
NeuroGrid
Smart Mobs points to NeoroGrid:
TECH TALK: Tomorrow's World: Five Dimensions
There are five dimensions along which we can explore tomorrow's world and build the right models which can be the foundation for creating (or growing) future businesses: devices, networks, infrastructure, services and payments. There is a fascinating inter-play between these elements which promises to rewire (and unwire) the future. For entrepreneurs seeking action and opportunity, there is plenty available. For incumbents, this is no time to rest. For customers, it is options unlimited. We will begin with an overview of these five dimensions, and then consider each of them in greater detail in this series. Devices are the delivery points for services. There are three primary devices in our lives: television sets, which deliver broadcast entertainment, phones which deliver voice communications, and computers which deliver interactive data-oriented services. India has about 100 million TVs, with more than half having access to cable. There are now about 45 million mobile phones and an equivalent number of landlines. There are about 12 million computers. While mobile phones are growing at 2 million a month, the computer industry needs about six months to sell an equivalent number. A large proliferation of cybercafes across India has ensured an Internet user base of about 25 million users. The future of devices is inextricably tied to that of networks. Both the TV industry and the telecom industry has perfected the art of delivering services to zero-management devices over networks. This is what the computer industry has not done in the past two decades. The cost and complexity of the user device and the inherent challenges of delivering new services has stunted growth. In a way, the personal computer industry is an aberration in a half-century old industry which has largely thrived on centralised computing. It is time to now learn from others and go back to the roots for the computer industry if they are to tap the next 90% of the market in India. The time has come to use the air to build high-speed wireless broadband networks to create a pervasive and ubiquitous always-on envelope of connectivity. The server-side infrastructure will be a critical component of tomorrow's world. As we will see later in the series, what is needed is a virtualisation layer which makes a large number of commodity computers appear as a single large computer. This infrastructure needs to provide the platform for computing, storage and user provisioning. This centralised grid will be the foundation to build the “commPuting” utility. The fourth dimension is perhaps the most critical of them all – the services. Users do not care about hardware or software – what they care about is the set of aggregate services and how these services make a difference to their lives. It is the services which will determine the success of this architecture. Be it education or entertainment, auctions or gaming, the services offered will create the value for the rest of the ecosystem. At the same time, service providers have to think how they will architect their offerings in the new connected world of tomorrow. The final dimension is that of payments. Telephone companies and cable companies have perfected the art of collecting money on a subscription basis every month. This contrasts with the computing industry which wants a large upfront investment from its users. The mobile phone companies have gone one-step better with the use of pre-paid cards to eliminate credit-related issues. Payments and a revenue sharing infrastructure between the infrastructure and service providers will be a critical component of tomorrow's world. Tomorrow: The Road Ahead Related Entries: [All]TECH TALK: Tomorrow's World: Five Markets (Part 2) [December 17, 2004] TECH TALK: Tomorrow's World: Five Markets [December 16, 2004] TECH TALK: Tomorrow's World: Five-in-one [December 15, 2004] TECH TALK: Tomorrow's World: Payments [December 14, 2004] TECH TALK: Tomorrow's World: Services [December 13, 2004]
Tech Talk
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Wiser with the earlier tech spurts, its the fifth dimension which will be most important to companies who would usher in the new revolution. Finally, as all these become part of our lives, the services would be a paid service(at least in the near future) and the best payment model would be an aggregate recurring. Which means, a household should be able to get an invoice which covers all services and would be part of the monthly outflow ( much like the cable bills). What will surely be accelerating (the rate of entrenchment) would be a fixed recurring outflow subject to standard usage. For those who exceed that, there can be a rate defined. This would be appeal to both class of users - "want all, but at a fixed price" and the " want all and as much as I want - whatever be the price" A |
A Spot Thought - Weird how the trend for Hotels and Hospitals should be interchanged for an Ideal World ;)
But on the whole, I think the trends are what HAVE been rather than what WILL be. Like,
For Movies, Sequels atleast hardly do as big a business as the First Edition in Raw terms (Return on Investment). a la Matrix or Jurassic Park style.
For Beverages, Ads are on the decline as I gathered from the latest update. Companies def. want to reap some benefits of their already established brands. Perhaps Mobile phone and Mobile Service Providers come into the category of 'More Ads' but not 'Fewer Carbs and Cals', but 'Fewer feature differences from their competition'.
For Publishing, if its already online, why buy the hard copy, I think, is the trend. Currently there are certain problems for screen radiation as a drawback for extensive online reading. But imagine an innovation that relaxes that problem and think POTENTIAL.
For Autos, its also - 'Is it on Petrol? is it on Electricity? is it a hybrid?'
Well, like I said, a Spot Thought ;)
Posted by Kshitij Chandan