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Cloud computing will outpace the desktop by 2020

Monday, June 28th, 2010

janna anderson

Janna Anderson

By 2020, most computer users will carry powerful pocket-sized computing devices that connect to networks using data and applications in the cloud rather than on the device, Robert Cannon, senior cousel for Internet law at the Federal Communications Commission told the Pew Research Center’s Internet and American Life Project.

Cannon responded to a Pew study that surveyed about 900 Internet and technology experts that found 72 percent believe future technology users will do business on shared mobile platforms and smart phones rather than desktops in coming years.

Some experts in this survey said that for many individuals the switch to mostly cloud-based work has already occurred, especially through the use of browsers and social networking applications.

They point out that many people today are primarily using smartphones, laptops, and desktop computers to network with remote servers and carry out tasks such as working in Google Docs, following web-based RSS (really simple syndication) feeds, uploading photos to Flickr and videos to YouTube, doing remote banking, buying, selling and rating items at Amazon.com, visiting with friends on Facebook, updating their Twitter accounts and blogging on WordPress.

“It’s obvious that people are enthusiastically embracing the ideal of ambient intelligence — being able to share and access data and create things anywhere, anytime,” said Janna Anderson, an associate professor at Elon University’s School of Communications and the report’s author.

Anderson pointed out, though, that the shift requires overcoming obstacles such as security and privacy concerns and limited broadband spectrum.

The desktop will survive

Among the other observations made by those taking the survey were: large businesses are far less likely to put most of their work “in the cloud” anytime soon because of control and security issue

This does not mean, however, that most of these experts think the desktop computer will disappear soon. The majority sees a hybrid life in the next decade, as some computing functions move towards the cloud and others remain based on personal computers.

Some survey participants said they expect that a more sophisticated desktop-cloud hybrid will be people’s primary interface with information. They predicted the desktop and individual, private networks will be able to provide most of the same conveniences as the cloud but with better functionality, overall efficiency, and speed.

Among the defenses for a continuing domination of the desktop, many said that small, portable devices have limited appeal as a user interface and they are less than ideal for doing work.

The Web-based survey was conducted with Elon’s Imagining the Internet Center. It is the fourth of five reports this year.

Previously on TechJournal South:

The Future Internet

Contact Tech Journal South Editor and writer Allan Maurer:

Allan at TechJournalSouth dot com.

FutureWeb bringing impressive lineup of Internet stars to Raleigh

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

futureweb logoRALEIGH, NC – FutureWeb, a conference exploring the future of social networks, open source, media, privacy, and other Web-centric issues, is bringing an impressive lineup of Internet mavens to the Raleigh Convention Center April 28-30 (next Wednesday-Thursday).

Panelists and speakers include Vint Cerf, Tim Berners Lee, Danny Weitzner, Chris DiDona, Doc Searls, and Bob Young among many others.

Cerf, often called “Father of the Internet,” spoke at our own Southeast Venture Conference in February and is an engaging and entertaining keynote speaker with a wealth of personal stories to bolster his insightful ideas about the future of the Internet.

Leaders from Google, the Web Science Trust and Web Foundation, eBay, NTIA, the US Executive Office of the President, Microsoft, EPIC, the Internet Society, Red Hat, Lulu, the Mozilla Foundation and more will discuss the probable evolution of the Web and what it will mean for our social, political and economic future.

We understand that Bob Young, CEO and founder of Lulu.com and a co-founder of open source software provider Red Hat, will be making a major announcement about Lulu. The company recently temporarily withdrew its planned initial public offering of stock on the Toronto Exchange, so we’ll be looking forward to what Young has in mind for the Web-based publish on demand company.

imagining_internet_sm_logoThe Mission of the sponsoring organization, Elon University’s Imagining the Internet, is to explore and provide insights into emerging network innovations, global development, dynamics, diffusion and governance. The Center is based at Elon Univeristy’s School of Communications and is a mostly volunteer effort financed by the university, with added support from the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project.

Speakers and panelists at the event include:

Tim Berners-Lee, Vint Cerf, Danny Weitzner, danah boyd, Andrew McLaughlin, James Hendler, Chris DiBona, Bob Young, Marc Rotenberg, Nigel Shadbolt, Nathaniel Lin, John Lovett, Michael Clemente, Doc Searls, Lee Rainie, Scott Bradner, David Ferriero, Phil Mui, Bob Page, Alejandro Pisanty, David Burney, Michael Tiemann, Charles Coleman, Tom Rabon, Penny Abernathy, Michael Rappa, Paul Jones, Cathy Davidson, Henry Copeland, Tom Miller, Nathaniel James, Fred Stutzman, Dan Conover, Mark Anthony Neal, Negar Mottahedeh, Dave Levine, Zeynep Tufekci, Wayne Sutton, Ira Nathenson, Eric Fink, Jacqui Lipton, Tony O’Driscoll and more.

Schedule

Follow FutureWeb on Twitter!
http://twitter.com/futureweb2010

Learn more about Imagining the Internet!
http://www.imaginingtheinternet.org