TeCh NeWs Of ThE DaY
India has potential to lead mobility, cloud adoption
India has the potential to lead the world in the adoption of the Nexus
of Forces, the convergence of social interaction, mobility, cloud and
information.
The manner in which IT is used, developed and
managed will change significantly because of the Nexus of Forces, said
IT advisory firm Gartner. These pivotal technologies
include the use of media tablets, mobile applications, context-aware
computing, the Internet of things, next-generation analytics and
in-memory computing (IMC).
"However, for this to occur, new
infrastructure will have to replace the old; new types of servers,
networks and data centers will have to be rolled out, " said Rakesh
Kumar, research vice president at Gartner. "A cash-rich consumer base is
required that is able to demand and take advantage of social, mobile
and context-aware applications.
Transformation of this nature
is expensive and time-consuming. The economic, demographic and social
outlook for western economies suggests that, for the next few years,
such changes will be difficult to achieve. At first glance, India seems
to be well-placed to embrace these changes — it has virtually no legacy
systems, billions of dollars are being spent on developing new
infrastructure, a wealthy, a well-educated middle class hungry for
change, and the country is pivotal in the digital supply chain.
Therefore, Gartner analysts said the question of whether India will be
the first place to see the emergence of this new computing scenario is
important.
"Based on current forecasts, India will become one
of the world's biggest consumer economies during the next five years. By
2014, India will have more than 1 billion mobile subscribers. India
will see a significant rollout of new IT infrastructure during the next
five years in both the public and private sectors," said Kumar.
Given the economic and demographic statistics, the improving levels of
literacy and the large consumer base, India should be ideally positioned
to take advantage of the Nexus of Forces. Entrepreneurs in region, such
as Bangalore and Mumbai, should be able to create products that link
these technologies together.
"While there are significant
opportunities in India to lead in the Nexus of Forces, contrary forces
are also at play. The uptake of social media remains quite low. There is
a degree of ambivalence toward the use of social media for marketing by
Indian retailers," said Kumar. " Although it's easy to see how social
media could grow rapidly during the next few years, privacy concerns and
the cultural fabric of the country may suggest otherwise. "If the use
of social media does not reach a substantial proportion of that young,
affluent consumer base, then the benefits of the Nexus of Forces may not
fully materialize," he added.
A second factor is the
skepticism toward the cloud. Indian IT users feel that the public cloud
remains immature for enterprise use. The major concerns reflect the ones
that Gartner sees worldwide -- security, data retention and the
maturity of the offerings. One specific issue is the belief that the
underlying financial constructs of public cloud services do not add up.
"Many people feel that it would be difficult for public cloud operators
to provide enterprise services that are lower than their internal
costs. This view reflects the fact that most people still view the
public cloud as a software as a service (SaaS) model, rather than
infrastructure as a service (IaaS) or the platform as a service (PaaS)
model. This carries complex financial and technical permutations in
areas such as patch compatibility, testing of new applications and
contract management," Kumar added.
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