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Showing posts with label Future Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Future Technology. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 October 2014

Lenovo To Form New Company With Focus On Smart Devices


Lenovo to form new company with focus on smart devices

The Chinese tech giant will form a new subsidiary that will have a different name and branding with an aim to sell directly to customers in China via the internet.

It appears Lenovo wants in on the lucrative online sales action that Xiaomi's been enjoying so far. The Chinese tech company known globally for its notebooks will be setting up a new subsidiary next year on April 1 to focus on smart devices and Internet sales in China.
Lenovo's press release says that the new company will have a different name and branding, and will be helmed by its current president of China and Asia Pacific and emerging markets, Chen Xudong.
The company will also move Liu Jun, its current head of the company's mobile business group and the head of the ecosystem and cloud services group, George He, to the new company.
Like Xiaomi, the new company will sell new phones and tablets only through the Internet, skipping the distributors and carriers.
However, despite the vast resources and branding that Lenovo has, the road ahead may not be an easy task.
"Xiaomi isn't just about selling cheaper phones online; developing a cult following will be a challenge if Lenovo is really emulating Xiaomi," says IDC analyst Bryan Ma.
"Xiaomi comes from a software background versus Lenovo's hardware roots. It will be interesting to see how Lenovo measures success of this spinoff. Will it be looking at mindshare over profits?"
Lenovo's not the first Chinese company to try to spin off a more focused brand. Other tech giants such as Huawei and ZTE have also something similar -- Huawei's Honor and ZTE's Nubia comes to mind.
Given Lenovo's strong Asian roots and the fact that the new company's CEO, Chen, is well familiar with the region, it very well could be that Lenovo's new subsidiary will have its sights firmly set on Asia when it debuts next year.

Micromax To Develop New Phones On Modified Android OS

Image Home-bred handset maker Micromax Informatics plans to initially invest Rs 100 crore on services and innovation as it tries to move beyond the business of mobile phone hardware that has become more or less standardised. As part of the exercise, the Gurgaon-based company is developing a new set of smartphones on a forked version of the Android operating system, people privy to the development told ET.

The venture, code named Project Yureka, is likely to be formalised over the next two months, these people said. Part of the initial investment will go towards setting up research and development centres in Bangalore and Beijing, besides hiring top coding, programming and marketing talent.
"The processes are being formalised and it will take about two months for things to begin," said Micromax's co-founder Rahul Sharma. He did not say whether the company will create a separate wholly-owned unit for launching these set of devices, which may not have Google's stock Android operating system.
"We have a certain tailwind and we're moving in the right direction. I feel now that the hardware is fine but the next disruption has to happen on the software side where we will be empowering users," Sharma said without elaborating. Trade sources said Micromax could be in discussions with Cyanogen, the maker of Cyanogen-Mod, a modified version of Android that is a popular alternative OS and is installed on over 12 million devices worldwide.
Cyanogen did not respond to ET's queries seeking confirmation of its partnership plans with Micromax and its contours. Analysts tracking the burgeoning smartphone market in India said the next logical step for Micromax would be to look at services and innovation as the mobile handset space in India has become cluttered and highly competitive. Micromax has a 14 per cent share of overall devices in the country, second only to market leader Samsung with 17 per cent. It trails Samsung in the smartphone space as well with 18 per cent share compared with the Korean firm's 29 per cent share.
"Indian original equipment makers need some differentiation in their product strategy," said Jayanth Kolla, co-founder and partner at telecom research firm Convergence Catalyst.
"They have very little differentiation among them at the product level. So, building over the stock Android, modifying look and feel of the user interface can help offer a differentiated experience," Kolla added. Indian handset makers have followed the established model of sourcing mobile phones from China and selling them in India, replicated by a number of brands that have spawned since the likes of Micromax, Karbonn and Lava.
The three together hold 32 per cent of the smartphone market and some have already begun innovating. Lava launched the Hive user interface (UI) in August on Xolo 8X-100 smartphone model priced at Rs 13,999. The UI features customised elements including themes, launcher, widgets, customised system apps and direct connect with Xolo's software development team to offer feedback.

Facebook Creates ‘Safety Check‘ Tool For Disasters

 Facebook is launching a tool that lets users notify friends and family that they are safe during or after natural disasters. 

The tool, called 'Safety Check,' will be available worldwide to the social network's 1.32 billion users on computers and mobile devices. This includes the basic "feature" phones many people still use to access Facebook, especially in developing countries. 

People already use Facebook to tell people they are OK after earthquakes and other disasters but Facebook says the Safety Check tool will make it easier. It grew out of a disaster message board that Facebook engineers created in 2011 following the earthquake and tsunami in Japan. 

Once users activate the tool, it will determine their location using the city they have listed in their profile, the last location they've shared or the city where they are using the internet. If they are in an area affected by a natural disaster, Safety Check will send them a notification asking if they're safe. 

If they say yes, their Facebook friends will be notified. There's no option to say no. Users can also mark their friends as safe, but the friends have to approve it.

Friday, 17 October 2014

Watch Amazing Virtual Reality Video Technology Google Is About to Fund

 Google is reportedly leading a major investment into Magic Leap, a virtual reality company that’s building a hyper-realistic 3D experience. Magic Leap’s technology appears to create an independent 3D object within a real environment, and if the company’s promotional video above is any indication, the results are stunning.
Magic Leap CEO Rony Abovitz has said the company is working on “what we believe will be the most natural and human-friendly wearable computing interface in the world,” according to re/code. The technology, says Magic Leap, will create a more realistic 3D environment than current technologies like those used by Oculus Rift, a 3D headset company bought by Facebook this year in a $2 billion deal.
While Oculus Rift creates a flat, floating image at a set distance, Magic Leap makes it look as if there’s a 3D object on top of the real world, likely projected from glasses on the wearer’s face. Google is leading what may be a $500 million round of funding in Magic Leap, re/code reports, citing anonymous sources.
The New York Times reported in July that Magic Leap is using a digital light field with information that includes a scattering of light beams and the distance of objects

Unlock Your Door With a Phone

 You’ve probably opened your car without sticking a key in the door for at least a decade. So why do we still use old-fashioned keys on the locks at home? Electronic locks, around for years, are a paradox. They seem so obvious in cars, hotel rooms and offices, yet alien at home.
Now a crop of smart home deadbolts propose a different approach: Turning your smartphone into the key.
This is still a horrifying idea to many people, including most of my family. There are so many what-ifs. What if your phone dies and you’re forced to sleep in the backyard? What if it goes haywire and lets in murderers?
Two smart locks I’ve tried answer enough of the scary what-ifs to make me consider retiring my trusty brass keys. My favorite is the $250 August, an automated device in stores this week that attaches easily to the inside face of most existing deadbolts. My runner-up is the $220 Kwikset Kevo, which replaces an entire lock with more sophisticated technology, but is a little harder to make work.
The August app for iPhone and Android lets you lock and unlock your door in two taps.
When your deadbolts take commands from a phone, some magical things become possible. With August and Kevo, you can order the door to open automatically when your hands are full of groceries, or you just want to show off. You can travel light, because a smartphone can now replace both your keychain and wallet (thanks to services like Apple AAPL +1.59% Pay). You can send virtual keys to tenants, house guests and plumbers that expire before anyone wears out their welcome.
Smart locks can be safer than traditional ones because keys can’t be lost, shared or copied, and there’s a record of the comings and goings of keyholders. The biggest threat is old-fashioned lock-picking.
But an electronic lock requires a bigger leap of faith than an Internet-connected thermostat, security camera or light bulb. Can you trust it to open and close every time? I tested three smart locks in my home—August, Kevo and the $180 Lockitron.
It took a week to get comfortable enough to leave home without a physical backup key for August. Kevo was a bit harder. One time, it locked me out, so I had to climb in through a window. (The cause was a software error, which has been patched.)
I never totally trusted Lockitron, the only one of the lot with a Wi-Fi connection. It didn’t fit one of my doors, and its maker has yet to deliver on several promised features.
August and Kevo get the balance between reliability and functionality mostly right. Both leave an old-fashioned keyhole on the outside, so residents without smartphones (or, with ones whose batteries have died) can still come and go using keys. And since your phone connects directly to the locks with Bluetooth, they have fewer points of failure. Others, such as the $200 touch-screen smart lock made by Yale, connect your phone over the Internet to a potentially flaky smarthome hub.
August is the best-designed home technology I’ve used since the Nest thermostat. Free iPhone and Android apps allow you to dole out virtual keys to permanent residents or guests and track their activity. The hardware, which hooks onto many existing deadbolts by replacing the inside-facing latch, took me under 20 minutes to install.
Inside the chunky aluminum cylinder August attaches to your door, there’s a Bluetooth radio, batteries and a motor strong enough to turn the lock. To lock up manually inside the house, turn the August cylinder just like a latch. (Lockitron attaches a motor to your existing deadbolt latch, which is why I had a problem with the fit.)
When an authorized phone is within Bluetooth range, August can lock or unlock the door. If you use the app, it takes a few seconds to load. You can also set it to auto-unlock without touching your phone: An optional setting lets the app know when you’re approaching your door from the outside. (It isn’t quite as smart about automatically locking when you leave, but can be set to lock on a timer.)
Kevo, whose inventor appeared on the reality show “Shark Tank,” replaces your entire lock, eliminating compatibility problems. It takes a Kwikset deadbolt and adds a motor, batteries, Bluetooth radio and a touch sensor. This extra hardware lets it do a helpful trick: To lock or unlock, just touch the deadbolt with your finger when an authorized phone (or included key fob) is nearby. You never have to take your phone out of your pocket, let alone futz with an app.
There’s also an iPhone-only Kevo app that helps you manage virtual keys and track who comes and goes. You can hand out as many 24-hour temporary keys as you’d like, but Kevo charges you $2 each for more than two permanent digital keys. Any guest would have to download the app, too.
Still, installing Kevo isn’t for the timid. I spent more than an hour working through 24 steps and was frustrated placing two screws in particularly hard-to-reach spots.
Kevo lock by Kwikset F. Martin Ramin/The Wall Street Journal, Styling by Anne Cardenas
And then there’s calibration. Kevo, which has Bluetooth antennas on both sides of the door, is designed to unlock only when it senses an authorized person outside the house. (This security feature prevents the door from unlocking when you’re peering out from inside.) But Kevo failed me when its sensors thought I was inside. The company says that happened to less than 1% of owners—usually on doors with glass. A software patch fixed the problem for me.
Other what-ifs to consider:
 What if your phone’s battery dies? The physical key will still work, so keep one handy. Kevo includes a wireless key fob. August plans to soon work with other secure Bluetooth devices and unlock in their proximity.
 What if your lock’s battery dies? Both August and Kevo come with four AA batteries that should last a year. Their apps will warn you before they die. If they do fail, there’s always that spare physical key.
 What if you lose your phone? You can borrow another phone or computer to log in to your smart lock account and stop your lost phone from working as a key.
 What if the lock’s motor fails? The motor in Kevo is built to last for at least 50,000 uses; August says its can surpass 100,000. An old-fashioned key can override a dead motor.
August did fail on me when it couldn’t quite seal my old door. I’m glad I didn’t just walk away—the motor’s loud whirring told me there was a problem. The company’s fix? Replacement deadbolt locks tapered to work with doors that don’t quite shut all the way.
 What if a hacker breaks in? That would be hard. Both August and Kevo only connect to the Internet via a phone that can unlock it, so some hacker in a basement couldn’t just open your door. (Systems like Lockitron—which connect directly to the Internet—attempt to minimize risk with encryption.)
Someone could steal your account password and attempt to get a virtual key. August alerts you whenever your credentials are used on a new device, and texts or emails you a code that’s required to unlock a door for the first time on a new device.
I’ve gotten over the what-ifs that kept me up at night. August and Kevo are a serious option for homeowners, particularly those who host a lot of guests, roommates or Airbnb tenants.
But this is just a first step. My ideal deadbolt would come with a camera and be able to alert my phone when anybody enters with a key (metal as well as virtual). It should be smart enough to lock up at night if I forget. To be a compelling enough front-door upgrade, smart locks still need to make a quantum leap forward in peace of mind.

4 Things You Did Not Know You Can Do With GPS

 GPS, though best known for navigation, can be used for much more. Depending on who or what you need to locate, there is a combination of GPS devices and free apps that you can use nowadays.

We show you how GPS technology can help get around common problems:

1. Keep tabs on family members

October 17,2014
Keep tabs on family members
There could be several situations in which you need to keep track of family members or let others know where you are. Life 360, a free app for Android, iOS and Windows Phone, is a family locator and communication app.

The idea is that you can place yourself and family members into a private circle — location sharing can be made automatic too. Plus you can group chat with all members orjust one. You can also try a similar free app called Cabin (Android &iOS) which adds the ability to post to-dos, tasks and reminders.

You can also use the popular app Glympse (free for Android, iOS and Windows Phone) to keep track of someone. You choose who to send a Glympse to and for how long — once someone receives a Glympse from you, they will be able to track you in real-time, for the duration that you previously allowed.

Finally, if personal safety is the primary use case, try bsafe (free for Android and iOS). You start by creating a safety network of friends and family (as many as you like) and share your location. In an emergency situation, just one press of the alarm button will alert your entire network. With the alarm activated, not only does your phone send location, it can sound a siren (optional) and starts transmitting voice and video to bsafe servers in case you need evidence later.

2. Secure pets and children

October 17,2014
Secure pets and children
You could always use an inexpensive Android phone and an app like GPS Tracking Pro. If you'd rather not hand a phone over to your child or attach one to your pet's collar, you can get a small GPS tracker like TrackID. For Rs 6,700, you get a small, ready-to-use GPS+GSM tracker that you can place in a bag or clip onto clothing. There is a monthly fee of Rs 299 which covers the cost of the preinstalled sim card data charges and 100 SMS per month.

You can monitor the location on any browser. You can also set up geo-fences (safe zones) and be alerted via SMS when that fence is breached. SatGuide also offers a phone with GPS for Rs 4,990 that is specially designed for children.

3. Around the home

October 17,2014
Around the home
Home is where you can end up losing a lot of your smaller, daily use items like keys, spectacles, remote controls, flash drives or even phone cables. Rather than manually searching through every nook and corner of the house, you can use a Bluetooth tag - this is a small tracking device that can be clipped or stuck onto anything and tracked using your smartphone and the corresponding app.

Available in various bright colours, Nokia Treasure Tag (Rs 2,100) can be attached to a bunch of keys or kept inside your bag. The tag uses Bluetooth wireless technology and using a Windows Phone 8 smartphone, you can view the tag's location on a map or use audiovideo guidance to track the tag's whereabouts. A single phone can be paired with up to four tags simultaneously for tracking lost items.

Chipolo ($29 + shipping) is a coin-sized tracker with a built-in battery (6 months) that can be clipped to keys, a backpack or your pets. It uses Bluetooth, has a range of 200 feet and shows location on a map in the app (iOS and Android). With Chipolo, you can also track your phone if misplaced — shake the tracker and the phone will start buzzing too.

With a battery life of over a year, SticknFind ($49.99 for a pack of two) is another compact, coin-sized tracker with built-in buzzer and light. The app displays a radar screen on which you can view and locate the tracker (up to 100 feet range). Just tap on the app to make each tracker buzz or light up. You can set up the phone to notify you if one of the tracking stickers moves out of a preset range. You can also activate the 'Lost Sticker' feature for the app to search for a tracker and then send you a mail with its last seen location coordinates and timestamp.

4. Locate stolen vehicles

October 17,2014
Locate stolen vehicles
Satguide's vehicle tracker (Rs 11,490) comes with a magnet cover that allows it to stick to metal. The price includes the cost of installation and it connects with your car battery for power (cables are included in the box).You can set a Geofence so that if your vehicle travels out of the authorized area, you will be notified. The only catch is that you need to purchase a GSM sim card and subscribe to a SMS plan for the GPRS tracking to work.

MapmyIndia MMI Rover 200 (Rs 9,990): You can even track your vehicle in real-time using a browser and get information like engine status, speeding, vehicle route & address. The waterproof tracker has internal battery for backup and an immobilizer to cut engine power if the car is stolen.

SafeKar (Rs 7,999) uses your car's OBD port for power. It can then be used to track your vehicle's movements. It comes with a 12-month subscription (roughly Rs 170 per month post that).You can track in real-time, set geofences and get a daily report of your vehicle's movements

Tuesday, 14 October 2014

3 Things Apple Might Reveal At This Weeks Mystery Event


Apple could unveil new iPads, a new iPad and OS X Yosemite on Thursday.

“It’s been way too long” since Apple’s last event in September.
Or so Apple said—facetiously, we hope—in an invitation sent to press this week. On Oct. 16 at 10 a.m. PT, one month after the release of the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus in Cupertino, Apple will likely unveil something new again…again.
What is it? Techies have been swapping rumors, and there are a number that appear fairly well-founded:
OS X Yosemite
Apple’s new operating system is finally ready to be released. It has a number of big changes and new features, including a design that’s more akin to the colorful and simple style of the iPhone and iPad’s iOS. Yosemite also allows you to answer phone calls or send and receive text messages on your Mac. And iCloud Drive is like Dropbox, allowing you to sync files from your Mac and iOS devices in the cloud.
iPad Mini
It’s likely that Apple will release a new iPad Mini, as the company typically releases a product update about once every year. For the iPad Mini, speculation is hovering around a gold color option, an anti-reflective screen coating, Touch ID like the new iPhones, and a new processor. However, some observers believe Apple’s new iPhone 6 Plus stands to eat into sales of the iPad Mini, effectively turning it into a new iPod Touch.
iPad Air
An iPad Air upgrade is also Apple’s agenda, reports The Verge, but it won’t revolutionize the tablet. The new iPad will probably have a Touch ID sensor, a gold color option, and a screen that makes it easier to see in the daylight. Also expect better memory and faster computing.
iMac
Apple’s new desktop computer will probably be super thin and available in 21.5- and 27-inch screen sizes, speculates MacRumors. It’ll likely include a high-resolution Retina display. The resolution of the display could be double what currently exists, which would make the iMac ideal for abandoning your TV and watching movies on your computer. It’s been a while since the iMac got a proper refresh, so it’s about time Apple gave customers something new here.
MacBook
There’s a lot of speculation that the next MacBook is on its way soon, as the MacBook Air has had the same design for four years. We could see an improved Retina display and some other new features, but with production said to begin at the end of the year, Apple may not have the MacBook ready for next week.

Samsung Develops Five Times Faster Wi-Fi Technology

Image Samsung Electronics said it has developed a WiFi technology that can increase data transmission speeds by five times the maximum rate possible with existing consumer electronics devices. 

The 60 GHz WiFi technology will enable a 1GB movie to be transferred between devices in less than three seconds while allowing uncompressed high-definition videos to be streamed in real time, the Suwon, South Korea-based company said in an e-mailed statement on Sunday. The technology removes the gap between theoretical and actual speeds, and exhibits actual speeds more than 10 times faster than with existing WiFi technologies, it said. 

"Samsung has successfully overcome the barriers to the commercialisation" of the 60 GHz Wi-Fi technology, Kim Chang Yong, head of a Samsung R&D centre, said in the statement. "New and innovative changes await Samsung's next-generation devices, while new possibilities have been opened up for the future development of WiFi." 

The announcement came as Samsung rolls out new products amid growing competition from Apple and Chinese companies. Samsung last week said its quarterly operating profit plunged 60% because of stagnating smartphone sales and has announced a $14.5-billion investment to build a plant in South Korea to meet demand for semiconductor chips. 

Samsung said commercialisation of the 60 GHz WiFi technology is expected as early as next year. It plans to apply its new WiFi technology to awide range of products, including audio-visual and medical devices, and telecommunication equipment.

Soon All Gadgets Will Dissolve Fully In Water


A new generation of electronic devices that dissolve completely in water, leaving behind only harmless end products may soon become a reality. 

Pioneering research at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign may bring in devices that range from green consumer electronics to biomedical sensor systems that do their work and then disappear. 

John A Rogers' research group at the Department of Materials Science and Engineering Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory is leading the development of such concepts, along with all of the required materials, device designs and fabrication techniques for applications that lie beyond the scope of semiconductor technologies that are available today.
"Our most recent combined developments in devices that address real challenges in clinical medicine and in advanced, high volume manufacturing strategies suggest a promising future for this new class of technology," said Rogers. 

Practical applications might include: bioresorbable devices that reduce infection at a surgical site. Other examples are temporary implantable systems, such as electrical brain monitors to aid rehabilitation from traumatic injuries or electrical simulators to accelerate bone growth.
Additional classes of devices can even be used for programmed drug delivery, Rogers said.
The devices would provide robust, reliable, high performance operation, but only for a finite period of time dictated, for example, by the healing process - they would not only be biologically compatible, but also biologically punctual, performing when and as the body needs them. 

After their function has been fulfilled, they would disappear through resorption into the body, thereby eliminating unnecessary device load, without the need for additional surgical operations. 

The research will be presented at the AVS International Symposium & Exhibition next month in Baltimore

Top 10 Strategic Technology Trends For 2015


The top 10 strategic technology trends for 2015 are:

Computing Everywhere
As mobile devices continue to proliferate an increased emphasis on serving the needs of the mobile user in diverse contexts and environments, as opposed to focusing on devices alone.

"Phones and wearable devices are now part of an expanded computing environment that includes such things as consumer electronics and connected screens in the workplace and public space," said David Cearley, vice president & Gartner Fellow. "Increasingly, it's the overall environment that will need to adapt to the requirements of the mobile user. This will continue to raise significant management challenges for IT organisations as they lose control of user endpoint devices. It will also require increased attention to user experience design."

The Internet of Things
The combination of data streams and services created by digitizing everything creates four basic usage models Manage, Monetize, Operate and Extend. These four basic models can be applied to any of the four "Internets." Enterprises should not limit themselves to thinking that only the Internet of Things (IoT) (assets and machines) has the potential to leverage these four models. For example, the pay-per-use model can be applied to assets (such as industrial equipment), services (such as pay-as-you-drive insurance), people (such as movers), places (such as parking spots) and systems (such as cloud services). Enterprises from all industries can leverage these four models.

3D Printing
Worldwide shipments of 3D printers are expected to grow 98 percent in 2015, followed by a doubling of unit shipments in 2016. 3D printing will reach a tipping point over the next three years as the market for relatively low-cost 3D printing devices continues to grow rapidly and industrial use expands significantly. New industrial, biomedical and consumer applications will continue to demonstrate that 3D printing is a real, viable and cost-effective means to reduce costs through improved designs, streamlined prototyping and short-run manufacturing.

Advanced, Pervasive and Invisible Analytics
Analytics will take center stage as the volume of data generated by embedded systems increases and vast pools of structured and unstructured data inside and outside the enterprise are analyzed. "Every app now needs to be an analytic app," said Cearley. "Organisations need to manage how best to filter the huge amounts of data coming from the IoT, social media and wearable devices, and then deliver exactly the right information to the right person, at the right time. Analytics will become deeply, but invisibly embedded everywhere." Big data remains an important enabler for this trend but the focus needs to shift to thinking about big questions and big answers first and big data second the value is in the answers, not the data.

Context-Rich Systems
Ubiquitous embedded intelligence combined with pervasive analytics will drive the development of systems that are alert to their surroundings and able to respond appropriately. Context-aware security is an early application of this new capability, but others will emerge. By understanding the context of a user request, applications can not only adjust their security response but also adjust how information is delivered to the user, greatly simplifying an increasingly complex computing world.

Smart Machines
Deep analytics applied to an understanding of context provide the preconditions for a world of smart machines. This foundation combines with advanced algorithms that allow systems to understand their environment, learn for themselves, and act autonomously. Prototype autonomous vehicles, advanced robots, virtual personal assistants and smart advisors already exist and will evolve rapidly, ushering in a new age of machine helpers. The smart machine era will be the most disruptive in the history of IT.

Cloud Computing
The convergence of cloud and mobile computing will continue to promote the growth of centrally coordinated applications that can be delivered to any device. "Cloud is the new style of elastically scalable, self-service computing, and both internal applications and external applications will be built on this new style," said Cearley. "While network and bandwidth costs may continue to favor apps that use the intelligence and storage of the client device effectively, coordination and management will be based in the cloud."

In the near term, the focus for cloud/client will be on synchronizing content and application state across multiple devices and addressing application portability across devices. Over time, applications will evolve to support simultaneous use of multiple devices. The second-screen phenomenon today focuses on coordinating television viewing with use of a mobile device. In the future, games and enterprise applications alike will use multiple screens and exploit wearables and other devices to deliver an enhanced experience.

Software-Defined Applications and Infrastructure
Agile programming of everything from applications to basic infrastructure is essential to enable organisations to deliver the flexibility required to make the digital business work. Software-defined networking, storage, data centers and security are maturing. Cloud services are software-configurable through API calls, and applications, too, increasingly have rich APIs to access their function and content programmatically. To deal with the rapidly changing demands of digital business and scale systems up or down rapidly, computing has to move away from static to dynamic models. Rules, models and code that can dynamically assemble and configure all of the elements needed from the network through the application are needed.

Web-Scale IT
Web-scale IT is a pattern of global-class computing that delivers the capabilities of large cloud service providers within an enterprise IT setting. More organisations will begin thinking, acting and building applications and infrastructure like Web giants such as Amazon, Google and Facebook. Web-scale IT does not happen immediately, but will evolve over time as commercial hardware platforms embrace the new models and cloud-optimized and software-defined approaches reach mainstream. The first step toward the Web-scale IT future for many organizations should be DevOps bringing development and operations together in a coordinated way to drive rapid, continuous incremental development of applications and services.

Risk-Based Security and Self-Protection
All roads to the digital future lead through security. However, in a digital business world, security cannot be a roadblock that stops all progress. Organisations will increasingly recognize that it is not possible to provide a 100 percent secured environment. Once organizations acknowledge that, they can begin to apply more-sophisticated risk assessment and mitigation tools. On the technical side, recognition that perimeter defense is inadequate and applications need to take a more active role in security gives rise to a new multifaceted approach. Security-aware application design, dynamic and static application security testing, and runtime application self-protection combined with active context-aware and adaptive access controls are all needed in today's dangerous digital world. This will lead to new models of building security directly into applications. Perimeters and firewalls are no longer enough; every app needs to be self-aware and self-protecting.

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