Relax! It’s not meant to be a real formula, just a way of trying to think about the relationship between all of these. There is a great deal of growing interest in cloud services for the enterprise and more factors are coming into the mix expected to transform enterprises and impact their business models. Over the last few months - together with my colleagues - we have been closely examining what’s really happening, why it’s happening, and what’s needed. The result is a whole new Capgemini global business unit called Infostructure Technology Services which is designed to address the expertise ‘gap’ rapidly emerging within most enterprises. This is a summary of what we have identified and what is needed in outline, for the full story go to Capgemini Infostructure Technology Services.
The majority of enterprises can be summed up around four activities: buying something, adding value to it reselling it at a profit and the associated administering/operational management. Information Technology has done an excellent job on the two internal activities of adding value and administration/operational management, but has not achieved the same kind of impact on the two other aspects of buying and selling. The goal of business technology is to achieve the same level of improvement in these two areas and for that, it needs to use a different, common and open technology base from that of internal IT.
Posted by Andy Mulholland on March 8, 2010
Mobility has seen fast growth and been a hot topic the in last couple of years and at Mobile World Congress this year, it turned a corner and moved beyond being just a procession of breakthrough devices and new forms of wireless. The question is who noticed this in the IT or enterprise IT community and will they make the connection in terms of the enterprise user and models for cloud delivery?
The focus, announcements and fun have - in the past - always seemed to centre on new devices with incredible capabilities that invited the comparison with the functionality of a PC. Much less time was given to what people are using mobile devices for. That is the real game change to look at and at least one group of 24 operators grasped this and established a new alliance. The alliance is focussed on one simple objective: to take on Apple and its App Store dominance. Under the old rules of the game anything that increased connection time and usage was good, so as long as you were part of the Apple game all those extra call minutes and data were just what you wanted.
Posted by Andy Mulholland on March 1, 2010
If you have been reading my blog for long enough you will remember that during the Second Life boom, I was supportive of the principle that media would be changed by new capabilities around ‘virtual’ or ‘reality’, even if Second Life might or might not turn out to be ‘next big thing’ in quite the way some of its supporters believed.
My new HP laptop features a built in web cam and 3G card, (it has even got a rather cute keyboard light that on transatlantic flights has been useful when they darken the cabin!). So though its form factor is large, it’s a perfectly capable full communication and interaction device at every level from connected to wireless, sound to video. In other words a decent PC today is a fully functional multimedia device.
Posted by Andy Mulholland on February 22, 2010