Ten technologies to keep an eye on
Tuesday, 20 July, 2010
Gartner has identified 10 mobile technologies that will evolve significantly through 2011 in ways that will impact short-term mobile strategies and policies.
Investments in mobile applications and technologies will increase through 2011 as organisations emerge from the recession and ramp up both business-to-employee and business-to-consumer mobile spending.
The 10 mobile technologies to watch in 2010 and 2011 include two new Bluetooth versions that will emerge by 2011: Bluetooth 3 will introduce 802.11 as a bearer for faster data transmission and Bluetooth 4 will introduce a low-energy mode that will enable communication with external peripherals and sensors.
Both versions will include other technical improvements to improve battery life and security.
Gartner believes that Bluetooth 3 will facilitate corporate and consumer functions demanding large bandwidth (eg, downloading images and videos from handsets).
Bluetooth LE will enable a range of new sensor-based business models in industries such as fitness, healthcare and environmental control and will be used by handset and PC peripherals to enable new functions, such as PCs that autolock when users move away from them.
By 2011, over 85% of handsets will include some form of browser. In mature markets, such as Western Europe and Japan, about 60% of handsets will have smartphones with browsing and the ability to render conventional HTML sites in some manner. The growth in smartphones with relatively large and high-resolution screens will encourage greater numbers of people to access conventional websites on mobile devices, and will make it possible to deliver some B2C applications using conventional web tools without adaptation.
Widgets are installable web applications that use technologies such as JavaScript and HTML. Many handsets support widgets running on their home screens, where they are easily visible and accessible.
Despite the lack of standards, widgets provide a convenient way to deliver simple, connected applications, especially those involving real-time data updates (such as weather forecasts, email notifications, marketing, blogs and information feeds).
Mobile platforms will become more diverse through 2012 although consolidation will not have started and, in some markets, five or more platforms may have a significant presence.
Tools that can reduce the burden of delivering installable applications to several platforms will be very attractive.
Platform-independent application development tools cannot deliver a ‘write once, run anywhere’ equivalent to native code; however, they can reduce the cost of delivering and supporting multiplatform applications that provide a more sophisticated experience than the mobile web and operate outside signal coverage.
App stores will be the primary (and, in some cases, the only) way to distribute applications to smartphones and other mobile devices. The stores also provide a range of business support functions, such as payment processing, that assist smaller organisations.
They will also be a distribution channel for mobile applications and a commercial channel to sell applications and content (especially in international markets), and they will provide new options for application sourcing. Many applications will exploit ecosystem cloud services.
By the end of 2011, over 75% of devices sold in mature markets will include a GPS. GPS will be the primary, but not the only, means of establishing handset location. Wi-Fi and cell ID systems will remain important in situations where GPS is unavailable or unreliable.
The popularity of location-aware handsets will enable a wide range of B2E and B2C location-aware applications, and will serve as a foundation for more sophisticated contextual applications in the future.
During 2010 and 2011, the availability of multimegabit wireless broadband performance will continue to grow as mobile networks enhance their performance. Continuous improvements in wireless broadband performance will increase the range of applications that no longer require fixed networking and make mobile broadband a more effective fallback when fixed connections fail.
Embedded cellular networking will become a standard feature of many corporate laptops and will enable new types of network-connected devices and business models, such as e-books and media players.
Touchscreens are emerging as the dominant user interface for large-screen handsets and will be included in over 60% of mobile devices sold in Western Europe and North America in 2011. Touch-enabled devices will also make increasing use of techniques such as haptics to enhance user experience.
Organisations developing native handset applications may need to exploit single and multitouch interfaces and haptics to give their applications a compelling and competitive user experience.
Many network service providers increased their commitment to machine to machine in 2009, so a good range of both national and multinational M2M service options will be available in mature markets during 2010 and 2011.
Although the M2M market is very fragmented, it’s growing at over 30% per year. Low-cost M2M modules will enable a wide range of new networked devices and business models.
Key applications include smart grid, meter reading, security/surveillance, automotive systems, vending and point of sale, remote monitoring and track and trace.
Device-independent security isn’t strictly a single technology, but refers to a collection of security technologies, application technologies and sourcing options that enable the provisioning of applications that are secure, but less tightly tied to specific devices and platforms.
It includes thin-client architectures, applications as a service, platform-independent forms of network access control, portable personality, virtualisation and hosted security services, such as ‘in the cloud’ virus scanning.
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