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Android forecast to take 10 per cent of market

Android forecast to take 10 per cent of market

By:  John Cox  On: 29 Dec 2009 For: Network World (U.S.) Creator
 

In its predictions for 2010, Forrester Research Inc. (NASDAQ: FORR) anticipates most top tier mobile carriers will offer machine to machine applications and small to mid-sized businesses will buy more software from mobile app stores. The research firm predicts Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) Android will benefit from the support of firms such as Qualcomm (NASDAQ: QCOM)

Android phones will make significant headway in the smartphone market and 4G service providers will zero in on apps in 2010.

Those are a couple of the hot enterprise mobility trends identified by a trio of analysts from Forrester Research Inc., a Cambridge, Mass. market research firm.

Their new report is called "Predictions 2010: Enterprise Mobility Accelerates Again," and here's a summary of their ideas:

1. The top tier mobile operators will be ramping up fourth-generation network investments, and looking to business and vertical applications as high value offerings for users who appreciate much faster download speeds and reduced latencies.

2. Machine-to-machine (M2M) applications and services will be available from most top tier mobile carriers. And they're expecting a big uptick in business, fueled by the spread of IP-based wired and wireless networks into whole new areas. One big one: so-called green IT and the overall trend toward "smart grids" to manage and reduce electric demand. Consumer M2M applications will cover remote monitoring of homes, appliances, automobiles; enterprise M2M will take off in focused vertical markets like healthcare, energy, transportation.

3. Mobile devices based on the Google Inc.’s Android operating systems will take 10 per cent of the mobile device market in 2010. According to Forrester that uptake will be due to "heavy industry support" from Qualcomm Inc., Verizon Communications Inc., Motorola Inc. and Google, as well as the growing embrace of the open OS by developers.
Link to android

4. About 15 per cent of non-mobile employees in 2010 will pressure IT to support their personal mobile devices for work activities, compared to 10 per cent currently, according to Forrester. Smartphone-class devices are becoming more available, affordable and widely purchased, and their users want easy access to easy-to-use email, calendars, and corporate portals. Will IT accommodate the trend or fight it?

5. Mobile "app stores" will become a key software distribution channel for small-medium businesses, in addition to consumers. If permitted, smartphone users with app store access will be searching, buying, downloading and using a growing wealth of tools like expense management, staff approval and other productivity applications.

6. To cost-effectively manage this growth in mobile users, devices, and data, IT will look to emerging cloud-based mobility services. Rather than creating in-house device management, deployments, end-user support and security management, IT will look to a new breed of third-party managed services for these functions. A related trend: cloud services that reach deeper into the enterprise to deliver information on demand to smartphones, and coordinate the user's identity and information across several devices and applications.


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john cox John Cox is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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