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Unlimited compute capacity coming, IBM says

Unlimited compute capacity coming, IBM says

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 03 Nov 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

With more than 15 petabytes of new information created every day, a world where computing capacity is unlimited is just beyond the horizon, according to the director of the IBM Canada Lab

In the automotive industry, Wildberger said, some companies are looking at driving pattern information and trying to develop a real-time system that will detect whether a driver is going to fall asleep or not. They would accomplish this by monitoring any changes a driver makes while using the accelerator and the steering wheel, he said.

The need to take advantage of all this newly available data has also spurred on many cities to launched “smart initiatives,” Wildberger said. At the City of Chicago, the emergency response management system is taking advantage of audio triangulation technology in select neighbourhoods.

“That means when there’s a gunshot, sensors are able to determine where the gunshot was,” he said. Rolling this technology out citywide would get police to the scene of a crime faster and hopefully reduce criminal activity in general.

Doug Heintzman, director of strategy for IBM’s Lotus Software, said Big Blue’s smarter planet idea should also filter down to the internal workings of global enterprises.

He referred to social analytics as the ability to understand how people work together in an organization and how knowledge is built-up via social networking tools.

“If somebody sends me an e-mail about something, the system itself should understand the key words, feed them as input into the business intelligence engine, and generate a report,” he said. The future of enterprise communication will be dynamic systems that connect people and data instantly, he said.

“Embedding this type of communication ability into everything we do is essential,” he added.

But despite the fact that some companies appear to be buying into IBM’s smarter planet initiative and trying to take advantage of the seemingly endless supply of consumer data being generated, these organizations are still in the minority.

Wildberger referenced IBM data, which indicated that 85 per cent of compute capacity is idle and 70 cents of every dollar spent on IT goes to maintaining systems rather than taking advantage of new data.

The companies that make the investment to get smarter, and actually take advantage of all the data created in a world with unlimited computing capacity, will be the most successful in the future, he added.








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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.
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