Imaginación y Creatividad aplicada a los nuevos Negocios 2.0
Creador de Acroworld 2.0, Empresa dedicada al tema Gestion Documental orientada al Escenario 2.0, Creador de Squoosh, Capsula de Negocios 2.0, dedicada a acompañar a sus Clientes en distintos Proyectos, Consultor Internacional, Technical Evangelist Adobe Systems / Acrobat & PDF. Consultor de Medios & Web 2.0, Social Media Marketing (Friccion), Social Business Design, Social Content, Consumidor de la tecnologia Apple. Consultor para Macromedia, Apple . Premiado a nivel Nacional e Internacional. Premio al "Mejor Consultor de Latinoamerica" Adobe Systems . Mejor Speaker Argentino . 4to puesto en el Ranking Mundial al "Mejor Orador Hispano Parlante" . Mejor Consultor Senior de la Region. En La actualidad estoy muy Enfocado en Generar Canales de Contenidos entre Grandes Empresas, Proveedores y Clientes Finales. Mail gabymenta@gmail.com
Technology market research firm Gartner Inc has published the 2009 “Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies,” its effort to chart out what’s hot or not at the cutting edge of hi-tech jargon. It’s just one of an annual phalanx of reports that handicap some 1,650 technologies or trends in 79 different categories for how likely the terms are to make it into mainstream corporate parlance.
Jackie Fenn, the report’s lead analyst and author of the 2008 book “Mastering the Hype Cycle,” delivers the main verdict:
Technologies at the Peak of Inflated Expectations during 2009 include cloud computing, e-books (such as from Amazon and Sony) and internet TV (for example, Hulu), while social software and microblogging sites (such as Twitter) have tipped over the peak and will soon experience disillusionment among corporate users.
What’s most interesting in the report, now in its 14th year, is what the corporate research firm says is a long way off from the mainstream.
It will take up to five years for many of today’s trendy technologies to become mainstream, including Web 2.0, cloud computing, Internet TV, virtual worlds, and a true corporate mouthful, service-oriented architecture (SOA).
Funny how long hype cycles take to pay out. Three years ago, in its 2006 Hype Cycle Report, Gartner predicted Web 2.0 would go mainstream within just two years.
More than five years out, which means nearly dead in terms of industry attention, are technologies such as the once hot radio-frequency ID (RFID) concept, along with mobile robots and human augmentation and some absurdly high concepts like context-delivery architectures.
The second chart, on the right, describes Gartner’s methodology. It’s all very imprecise, but a game worth playing.
Images: Gartner (August 2009)
Via.blogs.reuters.com
Copyright ®2008 - GAby Menta - Log in
Powered by WordPress | Evidens [White] Theme by Design Disease for PremiumThemes.com
Recent Comments