1) Wearables continue to tank
This is yet another case of the industry looking for new growth
opportunities and a chance to expand by driving something the public
doesn't really want. People don't want another device to carry or
remember to wear, they are often inaccurate, and the newness wears off
quickly and they get tossed in the drawer.
2) IoT proves a hard sell
Take what I said above and multiply it by 10. I don't know anyone
screaming for an Internet-connected refrigerator. Then again, Steve Jobs
did famously say “A lot of times, people don’t know what they want
until you show it to them.” But with concerns about privacy by
government and corporate snooping, security from all the hacks and
general public tech illiteracy (the Silicon Valley is so myopic about
this), IoT will be a hard sell.
3) BYOD chickens come home to roost
Many firms established BYOD rules when the trend first began, and they
never revisited them. Eventually, there will be a reckoning where
companies have to set down rules concerning data security and loss
prevention, not to mention who pays the bills. It's only a matter of
time before we get stories of employees giving up on BYOD and telling
their boss to just provide a device.
4) Stock market crash and burn
The stock market has been going gangbusters, but it won't last. Every
seven years, the stock market melts down like Chernobyl. We all remember
2008, and the recent "Cromnibus" budget deal in Washington has set us
up for a repeat. In 2001, it hit the skids due to the Dot Bomb crash and
9/11. In 1994, the bond market went into the toilet. And in 1987 we had
Black Monday with the massive sell-off. And if you don't believe me,
maybe this guy's words will carry weight.
5) AMD finally bottoms out, Qualcomm acquires it for IP protection
AMD is in a real tough spot. Its CEO change caused a collapse in
confidence and stock, neither of which has bounced back. Nvidia is
gaining market share and is now over 70%, according to Jon Peddie
Research. There are hints of big things to come but nothing concrete,
and the company has been through endless rounds of layoffs.
Nvidia wouldn't be allowed to buy the company, unless it was torn in
half and it got the x86 business (and CEO Jen-Hsun Huang has repeatedly
said he doesn't want an x86 business), with the GPU side going to Intel.
A more likely outcome is Qualcomm grabbing the company primarily for IP
protection against Intel.
6) IT continues to dump its own data centers in favor of the cloud
The trend of shutting down an on-premises data center in favor of a
cloud solution has been going on for some time, but it will take off in
2015 for one very good reason – Windows Server 2003 is reaching its end
of life and there are 10 million 2003 server installations out there
that need upgrading. Many companies may decide it's easier to move to
the cloud than buy new servers and go through a rip-and-replace routine.
7) Windows 10 is a hit, mostly
Windows 10 seems to have a lot of warm and fuzzy feelings around it, and
it will likely revive PC sales, especially in the enterprise. The only
thing that will mute Windows 10 at this point is declining interest in
PCs. If the trend toward tablets as PC replacements continues, well,
there's nothing Microsoft can do about that except get the tablet
experience right, which it seems to have done with Surface 3.
8) Big Data's growth will be hampered by talent shortages
Big Data is an important new trend in tech, but it's also a significant
change in how computer science is done. It requires people with
specialized, advanced degrees, and there are not a lot of them on the
market. In fact, there have been repeated predictions of talent shortages
of data scientists and other people to make Big Data work. The people
who have that kind of experience, however, will make some serious money.
9) Tablets will crash and burn
Tablet sales are already slowing down and the trend likely won't reverse
in 2015. Some experiments have failed, like the Los Angeles Unified
School District's $1.3 billion tablet boondoggle. I expect as the
batteries start to die on these things and they are not replaceable,
that will also hurt. The main problem, though, is that tablets don't
have an advocate. Steve Jobs was the big champion of the tablet and no
one has stepped forward to take up the mantle.
10) MMOs start dying off
My one consumer prediction. For some time now, every game company and a
whole bunch of startups had massively multiplayer online games in the
works. Then they all started failing. "Star Wars: The Old Republic,"
"Final Fantasy XIV," and "Elder Scrolls Online" all bombed recently, and
when an "Elder Scrolls" game bombs, that's a big warning. Many other
MMOs have faded into nothing. And Blizzard killed its MMO codenamed
"Titan" after seven years of R&D. The reality is these games demand
too much time and people who play them frequently suffer from health problems for their addictions.
No comments :
Post a Comment