Privacy issues will have to be sorted out. The brouhaha over Facebook's Beacon ad system won't be the last situation to cause outcry by any stretch because social-networking sites will continue to push the envelope. Users will push back. Legislation and regulations will be proposed and enacted. Which leads us to....
Blurred lines
Distinctions between consumer and corporate IT will continue to blur, and the social-networking phenomenon is but one element
of that. iPhone-buying employees will bring that device into the enterprise in ever-growing numbers, forcing IT departments
to deal with it. Security and protection from hackers, spam, phishers, and the lot of cybermiscreants will continue to pose
a huge headache for network administrators as home IT merges with corporate IT.
The consolidation drumbeat
Pure-play software vendors will increasingly be a thing of the past as Oracle and other monoliths swoop in on more acquisition
targets in the new year.
And IDC has predicted for 2007 and again for 2008 that Salesforce.com will be bought (though '07 isn't over yet). That seems like a good guess. We don't expect Palm to make it through '08 without being bought, and that long-rumored Microsoft-RIM deal could come to pass, too.
Virtualization comes to the desktop
We didn't want to make a virtualization prediction, but we would be remiss not to. Many prognosticators are gazing into their
crystal balls and seeing virtualization on desktops. While some analysts are predicting that will be a sort of Thin Client
2.0, Barry Eggers, Lightspeed general partner, enterprise infrastructure, envisions something different. "Thin clients were
about reducing up-front capital costs with a slimmed-down hardware client. Desktop virtualization is about intelligently provisioning
applications to desktop users," he says.
He envisions a more successful model will find IT shops using desktop virtualization in conjunction with virtualized servers. Early adopters are finding that users weren't so keen on that model because the "user experience [is] much less satisfying than a full desktop," he says, but that will start to change in the new year. How? And where will it lead? We'll leave that to the 2009 predictions.
Vote early and often
Although we realize that the United States is not the center of the universe, the upcoming election seems more important on
a global scale than others in recent memory. So we predict historic levels of turnout at the polls in November, and that will
give rise to historic levels of problems with electronic voting. Ohio will be a mess in that regard. Florida won't be appreciably
better. While the outcome of the presidential race won't be imperiled by e-voting issues, some state and local races will
need manual recounts owing to problems with machines.
Sorting out how to regulate e-voting (again) will keep the new Congress (with Democrats in control of both houses) busy in the first quarter of next year. The new president might not directly affect IT, though the president's views regarding the use of technology have certainly had an effect in recent years. On that note, we'll make our boldest prediction for 2008: President Obama.
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