| By Jeremy Geelan | Article Rating: |
|
| December 31, 2005 07:15 AM EST | Reads: |
76,996 |
JIM MILBERY: SANs, AJAX, Web 2.0, Blog consolidation, InfoSec
ERIC NEWCOMER: Semantic Web, SOA, Standards, Open Source, AJAX
1. Several of us who have been saying for years that the Semantic Web has no commercial value will be proven wrong, although it still seems unlikely that technologies such as RDF and OWL-S will really do everything people think they will.
2. The distributed processing architecture for SOA infrastructure will gain adoption over the hub-and-spoke architecture, which is just too limiting and expensive compared to the more flexible and cost effective distributed approach.
3. The OASIS WS-Transactions specs will be completed during 2006 as stated in the WS-TX TC charter.
4. Customers will begin to push harder than ever for real software standards, in increasing recognition of the comparatively higher costs of doing business in a proprietary world.
5. The open source world will become recognized as a source of innovation, not just the commoditization of existing ideas. The open source world doesn’t suffer from the kind of organizational inertia that can inhibit innovation behind closed doors.
6. AJAX will become established as the solution for “browsers for SOA” but it will not solve the problem of how you access all the data still contained in legacy environments, which still need to be service enabled – with their mission critical qualities of service preserved.
Register here for SYS-CON's "Real-World AJAX" One-Day Seminar in New York City, March 13, 2006, Featuring Jesse James Garrett, David Heinemeier Hansson, Rob Gonda, and others.
Next up is Alan Williamson, Technology Evangelist for SpikeSource and distinguished former editor-in-chief of JDJ – as well as chief architect of BlueDragon:
ALAN WILLIAMSON: Java, BitTorrent, Googlecrash, Adobe, IE
DANNY AYERS: SOA, REST, Single Sign-On, SemWeb, iComm, Structured Blogging
J P MORGENTHAL: VPMNs, AJAX, VoIP Phones, SaaS, Semantic Technologies1. Private mail networks: With people getting slammed I believe we will see the rise of VPMN (Virtual Private Mail Networks). Essentially, these are analogous to VPNs, allowing private network traffic run over the public backbone. They use common SMTP protocols to deliver mail, but unless you have permission to send mail to the recipient the mail will be rejected.
2. AJAX: We will see the rise of even stronger support for more powerful portable client-based applications based on Web protocols.
3. Composite Applications: With the rise of SOA and BPM, it’s going to get even easier to develop applications that require less low-level coding skills and which are more flexible and can respond faster to changes in business.
4. VoIP Phones: Advancements and growth in high bandwidth wireless networking means that wireless devices will be IP addressable, which means that the next wave of phones will leverage the public Internet for phone communications and common WAN/LAN. Windows CE and Palm devices will be able to provide voice services. Gone are the days of buying a phone dedicated to a single network provider.
5. Self-publishing: Garth Brooks & Wal-Mart, LuLu, MusikMafia. These names all represent a rise in successful self-publishing. Book, magazines, music are all media that are being self-published over the Internet. Soon, this will be expanding to software as Software as a Service (SaaS) becomes more popular.
6. Metadata: Metadata is finally being recognized as a critical enterprise asset. It’s now being managed properly and leveraged for its properties for automation.
7. Semantic Technologies: People and organizations are finally starting see the value in being able to describe data in context and defining the relationships between data. Semantic technologies enhance and extend the basic power realized by relational database technologies to data anywhere in the world.
Turn to Next Page for 2006 Predictions from Yakov Fain, Peter Zadrozny, Erik Thauvin, Patrick Hynds, Peter Yared and Tyler Jewell...
Published December 31, 2005 Reads 76,996
Copyright © 2005 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
- JDJ Exclusive: Scott McNealy's 2004 Predictions
- Where Is i-Technology Going in 2004?
- AJAX: Injecting Life into "Boring" Web Applications
- AJAX-Driven Websites: Under The Hood
- AJAX & Rich Internet Applications
- Meet AJAX: Intelligent Web Applications with AJAX
- What Are the Pitfalls to Implementing an AJAX Framework?
- What Is AJAX?
- Integrating AJAX & JMX
- The Jury's Still Out On Ruby On Rails (RoR) and AJAX
- ColdFusion and AJAX
- AJAX, Web 2.0 & SOA Power Panel Live From Times Square
- A Cup of AJAX? Nay, Just Regular Java Please
- ClearNova Exec Defends Open Source AJAX Development vs Java
- SYS-CON Announces "Real-World AJAX" Seminar Featuring Jesse James Garrett, Father of AJAX
- New AJAX Website Goes Live: AJAX.sys-con.com
- The Four "Quantum States" of AJAX
- SYS-CON i-Technology Podcast: Top Ten Predictions; AJAX Seminar Set for New York
More Stories By Jeremy Geelan
Jeremy Geelan is President & COO of Cloud Expo, Inc. and Conference Chair of the worldwide Cloud Expo series. He appears regularly at conferences and trade shows, speaking to technology audiences both in North America and overseas. He is executive producer and presenter of Cloud Expo's "Power Panels" on SYS-CON.TV.
- Agile Adoption – Crossing the Chasm
- Cloud Expo New York: The Java EE 7 Platform - Developing for the Cloud
- Cross-Platform Mobile Website Development – a Tool Comparison
- Architecture Governance – the TOGAF Way
- Twelve New Programming Languages: Is Cloud Responsible?
- It's the Java vs. C++ Shootout Revisited!
- Cloud Expo New York Speaker Profile: Arun Gupta – Oracle
- Agile Development & Enterprise Architecture Practice – Can They Coexist?
- Cloud Expo New York: Industry-Leading CxOs to Present June 11-14
- Component Development and Assembly Using OSGi Services
- Big Data: Information Spawns Innovation
- Apply Agile When Deploying Apps
- Agile Adoption – Crossing the Chasm
- Cloud Expo New York: The Java EE 7 Platform - Developing for the Cloud
- Write Once Run Anywhere or Cross Platform Mobile Development Tools
- Cross-Platform Mobile Website Development – a Tool Comparison
- Architecture Governance – the TOGAF Way
- Google Analytics with Monitis Dashboard
- Twelve New Programming Languages: Is Cloud Responsible?
- It's the Java vs. C++ Shootout Revisited!
- Cloud Expo New York Speaker Profile: Arun Gupta – Oracle
- Scaling Java and JSP Apps with Distributed Caching
- Agile Development & Enterprise Architecture Practice – Can They Coexist?
- Cloud Expo New York: Industry-Leading CxOs to Present June 11-14
- A Cup of AJAX? Nay, Just Regular Java Please
- Java Developer's Journal Exclusive: 2006 "JDJ Editors' Choice" Awards
- JavaServer Faces (JSF) vs Struts
- The i-Technology Right Stuff
- Rich Internet Applications with Adobe Flex 2 and Java
- Java vs C++ "Shootout" Revisited
- Bean-Managed Persistence Using a Proxy List
- Reporting Made Easy with JasperReports and Hibernate
- Creating a Pet Store Application with JavaServer Faces, Spring, and Hibernate
- Why Do 'Cool Kids' Choose Ruby or PHP to Build Websites Instead of Java?
- What's New in Eclipse?
- i-Technology Predictions for 2007: Where's It All Headed?




















