Login, change your address, subscribe to new or manage current magazines or e-newsletter subscriptions
ComputerWorldNetwork WorldCIO CanadaCIO Canada Governments' ReviewJobUniverse Canada
Advanced Search
Knowledge Centres
Content Types
Featured White Papers
Managing a growing threat: an executive's guide to Web application securityManaging a growing threat: an executive's guide to Web application security read more
Unleashing the Business Value of Today's MainframeUnleashing the Business Value of Today's Mainframe read more
IBM Whitepaper: Exploring key facts about Business Process Management with IBM WebSphere softwareIBM Whitepaper: Exploring key facts about Business Process Management with IBM WebSphere software read more
Yuk it Up
IT Executive Development Series
Some of Canada's leading academics discuss the best leadership practices for a wide range of IT challenges. It's a "must read" for those senior managers and other professionals who spearhead the IT strategies within their organizations.
Featured IT Quiz
IT Quiz: Test yourself to see if you have the knowledge to fit into the open source world, and compare yourself with the rest of the respondents
Featured White Papers
This white paper details Intel's current and future energy-saving initiatives to reduce costs and support business goals. Learn how Intel IT is extending its efforts to be a role model enterprise IT organization by supporting the Climate Savers Computing Initiative, which aims to drive a 50 percent reduction in computer-related CO2 emissions worldwide. No registration required.
Sign-Up for
Integrating IT
eNewsletter Delivered Weekly
Click here
Page 1 of 2

Technology crystal ball forecasts 2008 predictions

Advertisement

The predictable flood of 2008 IT prognostications has rolled in over the past few weeks and we have listened to analysts, vendors, consultants and our geek friends, accepting some forecasts and rejecting others. Turns out we did pretty well culling the wheat from the chaff last year and gazing ahead, though maybe we weren't bold enough in our declarations. So, this year we'll stretch a little and predict:

XP's reprieve

Microsoft will announce an extension until the end of 2008 for Windows XP availability, instead of cutting it off on June 30. In September '07, the company pushed the extension from the end of January until June after corporate users complained. Not to mention that many companies had decided to put off moving to Vista. The migration will continue to be slow for at least the first half of 2008.

Who's hacking whom?

A major international incident will erupt when Chinese hackers compromise the defense or security system (or both) of another government. Classified documents will be breached. Accusations will be traded. Relationships will be tense and ugly for a time.

The greening of IT

"Green" IT will become a sustainable model in the enterprise. The bottom line will be the primary force in the greening of data centers and offices. Environmental concerns (spurred by weird weather occurrences and alarming reports about polar bears) coupled with a woeful economic scene globally will be dominant themes in 2008, leading to corporate, consumer and government action that will include serious penny-pinching as more of us come together to try to save the planet and our budgets.

The European Union will again be the main governmental force behind pushing green regulations in 2008.

Advertisement

Network evolution

Mobile networks will not only open up to outside handsets, devices and applications, but will increasingly offer Wi-Fi and a plethora of location-based services. Media content, search, social networks, shopping and a variety of services will all be standard parts of the mobile network experience.

Networks "have to evolve in very radical ways," says Jake Seid, Lightspeed Venture Partners general partner, mobile. How radical has yet to be seen, but analysts aplenty envision 2008 as a watershed year for networks to be opened and for big changes on the mobile landscape, partly owing to the iPhone effect.

A Linux year

As Vista continues to limp toward wider adoption, Linux will make major inroads into the enterprise, as well as in government IT. At the same time, the leaner OS will become a more attractive option for home users and in consumer electronics, spurred by the Open Handset Alliance and the advent of Google's Android mobile platform, which will be built on the Linux kernel. Jim Zemlin, the president of the Linux Foundation, sees 2008 as a "really interesting, breakthrough year for Linux," and we think he's right about that. Expect assorted open-source applications to follow along.

Growing pains of social networking

Social networking will invade corporations by year's end. Services akin to the Salesforce.com offering that lets salespeople share leads and information will become standard in that market segment. But increasingly, social-networking applications will seep into all manner of companies, whether the IT department likes it or not. "It will be driven more by individual adoptions," predicts Konstantin Guericke, co-founder of LinkedIn and CEO of Jaxtr. "We're social beings -- we like to see what our peers are doing."

Page 1 of 2
Send to a Friend  Rate This Page  Print This PageAdd a new comment

Bookmark this article on:
del.icio.us| Digg it| Furl| Google| Technorati| StumbleIt| Yahoo!

Have something to say about this article? Add a new comment

If you find a comment inappropriate, You can notify the moderator by clicking the Report an innapropriate comment icon.
ADD A COMMENT
Name:*Your email address will not appear online and will be used only in the event that the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comment.
City:
Email:
Title:*
Comment:*
* required fields


Related Content
Articles

Book Reviews

Special Advertising Partners
IDC Case Study: Identity And Access Management Buying Criteria.
IDC analyses IAM buying criteria and deployment at Coppin State University. Coppin State replaces "first generation" IAM solution to obtain benefits needed for today's agile enterprise: ease of integration, rapid deployment, simplified compliance, flexibility.
White Papers
Branham Group Report: Unleashing the Business Value of Today's Mainframes
Over the past four decades, the reliability, security, and performance of the mainframe, or System z platform and its associated subsystems, has led it to become the backbone for much of the world's corporate data.
Branham Group Report: Deploying New Workloads to System Z
Where distributed systems were once viewed as potentially more cost effective and easier to manage than the mainframe, the demand for processing has increased the associated costs in this environment. Rising electrical costs and increasing personnel requirements for large distributed infrastructures have increased its total cost of ownership while the TCO of the System z platform continues to decrease.
Managing a growing threat: an executive's guide to Web application security.
More and more companies are relying on Web-based applications to • provide online services to their employees, • support e-commerce sales and • leverage portals, discussion boards and blogs that help staff better communicate with customers, partners and suppliers.
The IBM Rational AppScan lifecycle solution: building Web application security into software and systems delivery.
An overview of IBM's marketplace-leading Web application security solutions that gives organizations the necessary visibility and control to address the critical Web application security challenge.
The business value of Web 2.0 technology
By driving higher levels of efficiency and flexibility, Web 2.0 will forever change the way businesses operate – and the early adopters of Web 2.0 technology will enjoy the greatest competitive opportunities. This brochure explores how IBM Web 2.0 "Goes to Work" initiative can help your organization foster innovation and flexibility. IBM's Web 2.0 vision is to help businesses enable employees to do their jobs better and faster.
Report: The Global Innovation Outlook 3.0: The New New Media
Almost every company, organization, and individual — be it a billion-dollar multinational, a local government, or a person with a passion — is navigating the new communications landscape and experimenting with blogs, video, and custom publishing. We are all content producers. IBM’s Global Innovation Outlook decided to explore opportunities for innovation within the market segment of media, content, branding, and messaging. From these essays, interviews, and contribution.....