|
|
To print: Select File and then Print from your browser's menu
-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
|
Winners and users: Tech prophecies for 2006 By Rupert Goodwins, ZDNet UK January 05, 2006 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/insight/software/soa/Winners-and-users-Tech-prophecies-for-2006/0,139023769,139231292,00.htm
commentary IT remains a lively, exciting and suprising place. That makes predictions particularly foolish, but here are my best bets for the winners and losers of the next twelve months.
Good Year: Google Because Google thrives on data, not selling technology, it can give technology away as much as it likes providing only it gets more data in return. If it decides to create a free online Web service-based office suite, it will only help its cause. Were Microsoft to try and do that, it would attack its own revenue stream at its most vulnerable point. Will that happen? At some point, it must. Or Google could use its immense and ever-growing server infrastructure and interests in communication and wireless to move into media distribution, online gaming, TV, corporate data management -- its limiting factors are its ability to manage its growth and ambition without breaking the 'don't be evil' brand value it's produced. That's a better class of problem.
Bad Year: Apple There's the move to Intel chips, which in the currently fashionable phraseology involves transplanting an entire developmental ecosystem to a new planet. One, moreover, already populated with a huge number of very hungry Intel-based monsters capable of destroying margins in a microsecond. For all it has created a grossly expanded niche, Apple remains a vertical market company in the guise of a horizontal. It needs more pillars if the roof isn't going to fall in.
Good Year: Mobile Broadband This year, that's what we'll get. Mobile operators are making money with uncapped, fixed price services in Scandinavia, and that's with ordinary 3G. They'll make more money with HSDPA, and that's being rolled out overseas -- and trialled in Australia -- as you read this. Things will really get going once mobile broadband becomes cheap and efficient enough to threaten the fixed-line market. Not this year, but maybe next. Bad Year: Microsoft2006 has opened for Microsoft with flabby Xbox 360 sales in Japan, a fog bank of boredom hiding Vista from serious interest and an unpatched Windows exploit that can bring your computer to its knees just by looking at an image on a Web site. That follows a 2005 which ended with Bill Gates launching what may be Microsoft's online services strategy -- if only anyone could understand his presentation -- and the company's first full year of single-digit growth. Then there's the millions of euros per day fine from Europe and the Korean antitrust ruling. Still, look on the bright side. We can expect the launch of Office 12, which is undeniably the most exciting twelfth version of any productivity software, and a plethora of back-office products. Then there's the new strategy for Media Center, which is finally showing some respectable numbers on the basis of bundling the software on anything that might one day get a TV tuner plugged into it. And then there'll be all those Google innovations to try and keep up with.
Good Year: AMD At the top end, AMD's at no disadvantage either in raw CPU power or in its willingness to do deals. The move towards massively multiprocessor supercomputers may not be soaking up chips in mass market numbers, but it provides some substantial numbers for sales to point to and engineers to back up their pitches with. Will Dell succumb? That would make 2006 an exceptional year for AMD, so don't expect Intel to let it happen.
Bad Year: Itanium That's if it get launched. With some customers actually going back to the HP PA-RISC chip it's supposed to be replacing, and management changing within Intel, there's a bullet with Itanium written on it just waiting to be bitten. The company can be tough -- it shot Timna through the head mere weeks before launch -- and it needs to be. Good Year: IntelFortunately for the company, Intel isn't just about Itanium. Elderly geeks will find it upsetting to see the Intel logo change, but the focus on platforms -- by implication, end-user functionality -- over individual components is right in keeping with the times. Some of the company's non-processor bets are unlikely to do well; the company's wireless strategy seems doomed to take good ideas and abuse them, but there remains a strong strand of independent thought within the company that is capable of responding rapidly and effectively to market conditions. Broadband is the technology that finally makes sense of the digital home, and if the media companies themselves can avoid mucking everything up then Viiv should become the platform of choice among developers. Of all the companies who've been dabbling in the idea, Intel may have got the timing right. That counts for an awful lot.
Bad Year: Open Source There are still positive areas, such as Ubuntu doing so much work on usability and packaging, but it's hard to avoid the feeling that some of the structural issues propping up the Linux edifice are going to make it tough to beat it into mass-marketable shape any time soon.
Good Year: Open Standards The Massachusetts case has stirred up a lot of mud and heat, but it has got the main issues for software open standards out in the open. The arguments made there by the proponents of openness are strong and will be used in many forums around the world: the arguments against are unlikely to cut much ice with those who aren't already signed up to the proprietary way. One area in particular is absolutely desperate for open standards: health care. It cannot afford to do things any other way, but remains a bastion of the closed and outdated.
Bad Year: DRM Don't expect much more movement in the corporate sphere, where the concept of 'trusted computing' has run out of steam faster than you can run a spreadsheet showing how much capital expenditure is needed to ensure you can't send e-mails to your suppliers. Nearly 30 years after he spat it out on a San Francisco stage, Johnny Rotten's "Ever get the feeling you've been cheated?" stands ready to serve as the epitaph for DRM. Get those safety pins sharpened.
Copyright © 2009 CBS Interactive, a CBS Company. All Rights Reserved. |