The future of Enterprise IT

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Team members

  • Giorgos Roussakis
  • Reyner Karnali
  • Christian Wittenberg
  • Adi Kentsch


Driving Forces

1. Content Delivery in Location Aware Applications from converged 3G/Wireless Internet
2. Programming Languages
3. Sustainable Development & Global Economy
4. Dynamic Mobile Workspace
5. The Rise of BRIC Economies
6. Increasing Human-Computer Interaction
7. The shift towards Semantics in Business Intelligence
8. The increasing use of Social Software
9. The innovative Open alternative


Systems Diagram

Model.jpg


The Future of Enterprise IT

1.What is Enterprise IT?
2.How does Enterprise IT affect the organization?
3.How do you categorize/classify them?
4.What are legacy systems?
5.What is the GDP market for enterprise IT?
6.Who are dominating the Enterprise IT industry?
7.What are relevant trends that influence the future of enterprise IT?
8.What are known solutions to solve Legacy problems in Enterprise IT?
9.Who are the Primary Target Markets?
10.What is the average cost that firms pay for implementing Enterprise IT (in this case, ERP)?
11.How long does it take for firms to implement these solutions (e.g. ERP system)?
12.What are the problems of current Enterprise IT?
13.Does user experience matter in Enterprise software? What are the caveats?
14.How does the emergence of virtualization impact Enterprise IT?
15.What are the Impacts of Internet in the future development of Enterprise IT?
16.Any common global standard for Enterprise IT?

21. How can consolidation of solutions be beneficial?

22. What are interesting technologies for improving the way Enterprise IT is applied

o How would it be beneficial if all the various enterprise IT can communicate together (Interoperability)

o Automated Content Distribution change the way business contacts

o How can Semantic search be beneficial in enterprise IT

Most near-future technologies related to Enterprise IT are to a great extent also related to Enterprise 2.0 and adjacent standards. Improvements to existing Enterprise IT therefore include social enhancements such as blogs, wikis, RSS, podcasting, social networking and bookmarking, all representing a system of web-based technologies part of the Web 2.0 standards that are meant to provide rapid and agile collaboration, information sharing, emergence and integration capabilities. The Semantic Web extension to the World Wide Web provides further aid and development by its powerful methods to enhance relationships and collaborative working groups. Furthermore, developments in Cloud Computing and Service-Oriented Architecture aim towards the concept of Everything-as-a-Service that includes software, communication, infrastructure and platforms, turning the Internet into a broad and rich solution for all enterprise needs. Developments in Mobile (Internet) Technology have a significant impact too, by adding mobility features and solutions to enterprise.

http://www.aiim.org/What-is-Enterprise-2.0-E2.0.aspx http://www.aiim.org/images/WhatIs/E20_Tools.jpg http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Everything_as_a_service

23. How will Outsourcing of Enterprise IT will develop in time?

Why to Outsource? - Bring in expertise where it matters

- Better system design than you could ever do

- Better system maintenance than you could ever do it in-house

- Lower the risk of ownership

- Keep pace with technology changes.

- Allow staff to focus on managing the system, not building and maintaining the system.


Benefits of Outsourcing:

Seamless integration

Huge cost savings

– No duplicate data

– No manual consolidating of data for reports

– System automation of routine business logic

– System automation of some complex tasks (registration, scheduling, etc)

Improved Quality of your operations

– Real-time access to data for all staff and constituents.

– High data quality and integrity.

– More time for learning!

Better Work Environment - Lower Operational Stress!

– Lower risks in many areas – data loss, upgrade issues, viruses, etc.

– Manual data entry and “grunt work” is largely a thing of the past

– People like their jobs better because “the system works like it should”

http://jobfunctions.bnet.com/abstract.aspx?docid=147911&tag=content;col1 http://www.asbindia.info:8081/drupal/ASB_Un-plugged/files/Enterprise%20Solutions%20and%20School%20Administration%20Veracross.pdf

24. What measurements (IT matrices) are there in Enterprise IT?

25. How catastrophic will the future development of programming language will be for Enterprise IT (Impact of it)?

Programming language has been in continuous development, from the military software Fortran/Cobol towards C/C++, Java/C# and PHP/Python/.NET or Ajax. The problem with programming languages is that while they continue developing with each generation, continuity with older code is broken as current developers cannot understand older languages. Moreover, as enterprise solutions become more and more complex and programming tends to be simplified, software nowadays reached major limitations. It is difficult to predict how catastrophic the consequences of software limitations and broken continuity will be, but there are indeed some alarm signals. Looking at the history of programming languages, however, it is better assumed that the natural course of development will always discover a solution for any emerging need. Hopefully, knowing that the trend towards internet-based solutions is certain, and basing future development on learning from past experiences, programming will embrace clearly defined standards and software development will reach the required level of maturity and stability.

http://cplus.about.com/od/introductiontoprogramming/a/2008.htm http://www.redcanary.ca/view/top-10-programming

26. Artificial Intelligence with Enterprise IT?

Artificial Intelligence represented a myth in the early days of computer developments, a belief that one day computers will be able to think for themselves. Since, AI development took a different approach and search for more tangible applications such as knowledge-based systems or enterprise decision management. Nowadays AI in Enterprise IT is represented by Business Intelligence and the emerging Business Intelligence 2.0.

The concept behind BI 2.0 is that it is a more proactive form of analyzing data and understanding facts useful to businesses. It is strongly based on the development of Semantic Web, linking data and finding relationships, and plays an important role in the development of Service-Oriented Architectures, therefore being predicted to have a great impact on the future of Enterprise IT. Artificial Intelligence in its conceptual way may still be far from achievement, but Business Intelligence is already tangible.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_Intelligence http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_Intelligence_2.0 http://www.intelligententerprise.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=197002610 http://www.edmblog.com/weblog/2006/10/business_intell.html

27. Why is the Hardware keeps on improving rapidly, while software not? What is fundamentally different?

Hardware development reached a higher maturity level than software did. Hardware was always a step ahead of software and this can easily be seen throughout recent history. Examples such as multi-touch technology are straight forward. By nature, software follows hardware, but, as explained already, software takes more time to develop, encounters difficulties in maturity, standards and continuity, whereas hardware does not encounter such problems. Also, hardware is physical, opposing the virtual nature of software, and humans still value something physical more. It is more likely that someone spends money on buying hardware than software, often acquiring the required software through other means. Therefore in general hardware presents a higher business success and hence hardware R&D is better supported by financial resources than software.

28. What is the most viable future of Enterprise 2.0 ?

Enterprise spending on Web 2.0 technologies is going to increase dramatically over the next five years. This increase will include more spending on social networking tools, mashups, and RSS, with the end result being a global enterprise market of $4.6 billion by the year 2013. This change is not without its challenges. Although there is money to be made in the industry by vendors, Web 2.0 tools by their very nature are defined by commoditization; as is much of the new social media industry, a topic we touched on briefly here, when discussing how content has become a commodity. For vendors specifically, there are 3 main challenges to becoming successful in this new industry, including:

1.I.T. shops being wary of what they perceive as "consumer-grade" technology

2.Ad-supported web tools generally have "free" as the starting point

3.Web 2.0 tools will have to now compete in a space currently dominated by legacy enterprise software investments

http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/enterprise_20_to_become_a_46_billion_industry.php http://browse.workliteracy.com/enterprise-2.0 http://www.e2conf.com/conference/by-track.php http://www.futureexploration.net/ http://www.rossdawsonblog.com/extinction_timeline.pdf


Scenarios

1. Reservoir Dogs
2. 007 - James Bond