2010 tech forecasts: What the accurate analysts predict
- 06 January, 2010 07:07
- Comments
A venerable New Year's tradition in the tech world entails trotting out year-old predictions by analyst shops and laughing at their off-base prognostications. But here's a surprise: The two biggest analyst firms still standing -- Gartner and IDC -- did a pretty good job a year ago forecasting the shape of IT in 2009, as did the smaller Forrester Research and 451 Group.
Errors -- and they all made them -- notwithstanding, the major analyst shops did well enough for us to take their 2010 predictions seriously. Here's a look at what the analysts expected in 2009, what actually happened, and where IT may go in the new year.
The best call? It may seem obvious today, but a year ago nobody was talking about the end of all-you-can-eat, mobile data plans. But Gartner said this: "The limited capacity of 3G operators will lead to the demise of unlimited mobile data plans. Furthermore, the user perception driven by low data throughput will increase churn rates." And that's exactly the direction in which we're heading.
The worst calls? Gartner and Forrester were too bullish on the prospects of desktop virtualization taking hold last year.
To his credit, Forrester analyst Andrew Jaquith called out his own error, saying, "We were wrong, and called this trend too early. ... We also missed on the key driver." (He thought it would be security, not cost savings.)
And IDC struck out when it predicted that "government initiatives in 2009 will catalyze massive IT investments and industry growth focused on economic recovery, energy, and health industry streamlining, and improving financial markets' stability and transparency." Well, no -- and it was a surprising mistake because the company also predicted significant cuts in IT spending due to the faltering economy. It's hard to understand how that rather obvious insight squared with "massive investments".
Now onto the key predictions for 2010.
Come socialise with us! Facebook | LinkedIn
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email ARN
- Follow ARN on twitter
- AT&T moves closer to usage-based fees for data : Mobile platforms - InfoWorld
- The top underreported tech stories of 2009 : Tech industry analysis - InfoWorld
- InfoWorld review: Desktop virtualization for Windows and Linux heats up : Virtualization - InfoWorld
- Cloud Computing - InfoWorld
- From Sidekick to Gmail: A short history of cloud computing outages : Hardware - InfoWorld
- Gartner: Seven cloud-computing security risks : Security Central - InfoWorld
- The future of ERP: Why the 'big ERP' approach is dead : Applications - InfoWorld
- Proof of the coming mobile revolution : Mobilize - InfoWorld
- Iphone - InfoWorld
- The top underreported tech stories of 2009 : Tech industry analysis - InfoWorld
- The top underreported tech stories of 2009 : Tech industry analysis - InfoWorld
- Could Apple's rumored iSlate tablet be another game changer? : Open Source - InfoWorld
- Why Apple's rumored iTablet will fail big time : Windows - InfoWorld
- Reports: Microsoft's 'Courier' tablet to compete with Apple : Hardware - InfoWorld
- Get your Google Nexus phones while they're hot : Adventures in IT - InfoWorld
- Google android - InfoWorld
- In Search of the Long-Term Archiving Solution —Tape Continues to Be a Major Player
- Spectra Logic and Australian National University Success Story - March 2012
- In Search of the Long-Term Archiving Solution —Tape Delivers Significant TCO Advantage over Disk
- Premier Media Group Fast Study
- Aberdeen Group: Building Business Resilience Through Active Archive
-
Telstra announces HTC One XL
-
Tech Watch: Who watches the datacentre?
-
Preview: HTC One S
-
Facebook scammers host Trojan horse extensions on the Chrome Web Store
-
Webroot: Growth in security














Comments
Post new comment