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Gartner hype cycle for emerging technologies 2012
Gartner hype cycle for emerging technologies 2012












gartner hype cycle for emerging technologies 2012
  1. Gartner hype cycle for emerging technologies 2012 how to#
  2. Gartner hype cycle for emerging technologies 2012 full#
  3. Gartner hype cycle for emerging technologies 2012 software#

This just slows down sales cycles, when more straightforward selling could lead to more pilots, sales and a potentially larger market.

gartner hype cycle for emerging technologies 2012

While the hype surrounding cloud computing may have peaked, cloudwashing continues to cause confusion and inflated expectations with enterprise buyers. The Hype Cycle for Cloud Computing, 2012 is shown below:Ĭloudwashing and Inflated Enterprise Expectations

Gartner hype cycle for emerging technologies 2012 full#

Those enterprises that look to cloud platforms only for cost reduction miss out on their full potential. Leading with a strategic framework of goals and objectives increases the probability of cloud-based platform success. Gartner cautions however that enterprises are far from abandoning their on-premise models and applications entirely for the cloud.īased on an analysis of the Gartner Hype Cycle for Cloud Computing, 2012, the best results are being attained by enterprises that focus on a very specific strategy and look to cloud-based technologies to accelerate their performance. I guess Big Data is no longer an emerging technology.Enterprises are beginning to change their buying behaviors based on the deployment speed, economics and customization that cloud-based technologies provide.

gartner hype cycle for emerging technologies 2012

It made its first appearance in August of 2011 as “‘Big data’ and extreme information processing and management” with 2 to 5 years to the Plateau of Productivity,then just made it into the Peak of Inflated Expectations in 2012, then rose to the top of most hyped technologies (together with consumer 3D printing and Gamification) in 2013, then started to descend into the Trough of Disillusionment in 2014, only to completely vanish in 2015. Update: The Hype Cycle charts from 2010 to 2015 show the evolution of Gartner’s crystal ball over the last five years and allow us to track the hype around Big Data over that period. He started his presentation by declaring: “Those who live by the crystal ball, die eating broken glass.” It all boils down to what Gartner calls digital humanism: “New to the Hype Cycle this year is the emergence of technologies that support what Gartner defines as digital humanism-the notion that people are the central focus in the manifestation of digital businesses and digital workplaces.”įor the last 21 years Gartner has published the Hype Cycle report, of which Lee Rainie of the Pew Research Center has said: “There are sometimes disputes about where on the curve any individual innovation might rest, but there have been few challenges to the general trends it outlines.” I remember attending a Gartner Conference just before it started publishing this report and listening to a presentation by the analyst responsible at the time for Gartner’s emerging technologies research.

Gartner hype cycle for emerging technologies 2012 software#

Meanwhile, enterprises recognize the true capabilities of cloud computing, especially in the areas of software as a service and cloud office.” Mobility, IoT and digital business are creating a massive interest in analytics technologies and disciplines. They are among the pillars of digital business - creating new business designs by blurring the physical and digital worlds. They will drive efficiencies, unveil growth opportunities, and create new experiences for customers and constituents. Gartner has distilled the 2,100 technologies, services and disciplines it looked at into five megatrends: “The Internet of Things (IoT), smart machines and mobility form a set of interrelated disciplines that will soon be of huge importance to business. A glaring omission here is “deep learning,” the new label for and the new generation of machine learning, and one of the most hyped emerging technologies of the past couple of years. A related category-machine learning-is making its first appearance on the chart this year, but already past the peak of inflated expectations. This could turn out to be the most optimistic prediction in this year’s report. It is replaced by “citizen data science” which Gartner thinks, as it did regarding data science last year, is only 2 to 5 years from the plateau. Given the daily news about data breaches, one could only hope that next year’s report will include some specific emerging solutions to what is promising to be a growing economic burden.Īnother emerging technology showing promise last year-data science-has disappeared from this year’s report. This may simply reflect the hype-less status of cybersecurity technologies. It does mention, however, two general categories-“digital security” and “software-defined security” -both described as pre-peak, 5 to 10 years to the Plateau of Productivity.

Gartner hype cycle for emerging technologies 2012 how to#

Given that the most hyped news out of Black Hat and Defcon conferences earlier this month were demonstrations of how to hack into cars (self-driving or not) and take control of them remotely, it is interesting that Gartner does not list any specific cybersecurity-related emerging technologies. These technologies at the peak of the hype cycle also highlighted for me what’s missing from this year’s report.














Gartner hype cycle for emerging technologies 2012