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Looking Ahead To A Brand New Year
As we start 2007, infocomm industry
professionals share with us what they think will happen
in the year ahead.
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Altiris Inc
Dwain Kinghorn, Chief Technology Officer
With the release of Windows Vista, IT organisations
are looking for solutions to enable business continuity through
the transition in 2007. IT departments that want to quickly
take advantage of the new features of Windows Vista, recognise
that a well-planned, automated approach to deployment and
migration is critical to optimise employee productivity.
Businesses will be looking for the right solutions
to help streamline the deployment and migration of Window
installations. These solutions should also be updated with
support for Windows Vista 32-bit and 64-bit clients.
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ASKnLearn Pte Ltd
Yee Jenn Jong, Chief Executive Officer
I expect the infocomm scene to be vibrant,
especially with the improving economy, new government projects
and the national wireless project spurring demand for new
infocomm applications. In the education sector where we operate
in, schools are well into the second MOE IT Masterplan. Most
schools are now comfortably engaging greater usage of infocomm
to integrate with curriculum. There could be exciting ideas
being generated from the Future Schools Project too.
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CA Singapore
Philip Chua, General Manager
Singapore has started its drive to centralise
health records, and we expect this initiative to dramatically
gather momentum in the new year.
Giving the entire country's doctors instant
access to patients' medical records brings tremendous benefits
and has the potential to boost efficiency, cut cost, and save
lives during emergencies. Identity and Access Management (IAM)
poses the greatest technological challenge in such a system,
but recent advancements in the field, coupled with the government's
determination to push ahead with this initiative, should see
citizens and healthcare institutions enjoying many of these
benefits from 2007.
IAM technologies today can already efficiently
manage the administration, user provisioning, policy enforcement,
and auditing of user identity and access to help healthcare
institutions improve operational efficiencies and regulatory
compliance, as well as cut administrative costs and security
risks.
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EMC Singapore
Richard Price, Country Manager
We expect that infocomm technology will become
much more information-centric. This is a powerful development
as it means that information will no longer be captive to
a single application but can be leveraged across any number
of applications. This opens up a vista of possibilities for
collaboration and information sharing.
However, cross-application information lifecycle
management will usher in a new level of complexity, while
users are looking to vendors to mask that complexity. The
solution lies in virtualization and, over the next three years,
all information infrastructures, especially data centre infrastructures,
will be virtualised.
We see a major new change coming and we believe
that future interaction of information will occur at the Service-Oriented
Architecture (SOA) layer. To manage this interaction, we believe
that the future of information management is in model-based
resource management, which allows customers to manage all
of the resources in the data centre in a way that is much
more cost-effective, much simpler, and frankly, much more
optimised than any of today's framework-based approaches.
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F5 Networks
Tuan Q Le, Country Manager for Singapore
Technologically, Singapore is in a hotbed
where new technologies and developments are being tested and
applied. We expect to see continued momentum in the need to
deliver applications to the different end points or devices
as more and more people start using intelligent handheld devices
to help manage their day-to-day business functions.
Any type of device will need access to critical
data/information any time at any place in the world. And this
really puts more stress onto the infrastructure that is needed
to provide this information over different networking conditions
and types to different users. And, of course, there's the
need to do all of this really fast, very efficiently and securely.
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Hyperion Solutions Asia Pte Ltd
Suganthi Shivkumar, Managing Director, ASEAN & India
In 2007 and beyond, we foresee three trends
driving businesses to invest in infocomm solutions:
Globalisation - Businesses are now
competing in a ‘flat' world of increasing uncertainty. This
has given rise to a whole new set of issues including risk
management, sustainable development reporting, new measures
of profitability management, and strategic modelling.
Transparency - With increased regulatory
scrutiny and reporting of non-financial value drivers that
account for much of the value in corporations, and balanced
reporting, these pressures are heightening the need for greater
transparency so that management can truly understand their
business.
Alignment - There is a rising need
to align infocomm tools and business strategy to achieve the
business objectives.
These market dynamics are creating tension
for companies in ASEAN. As such, ‘empowerment' will be the
buzzword for the year as these companies will be quipping
themselves with predictive analysis solutions to give them
a business advantage.
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Juniper Networks Singapore
Beni Sia, Country Manager
IPTV has been a hot topic in the telecom world
for quite some time. The question is if there is real customer
demand for next-generation TV services via broadband. Some
observers are sceptical about IPTV's prospects in the unique
Asian environment. Given this, how can telcos make money from
IPTV? For starters, you don't have to look far to see that
IPTV, despite these hurdles, is taking off and Juniper feels
that it will continue to take off in the coming years.
IPTV service is not unique to Hong Kong. Taiwan,
Thailand and Japan also now have video services over broadband,
with differing levels of penetration and success. In 2007,
we will see countries like China, Australia, New Zealand and
Korea coming on board - some waiting for regulations and others
are in field trials.
This momentum is building in the face of strong
competition from broadcast and cable television. And the momentum
is built on a number of clever strategies and considerations
in the network architecture. So 2007 will be an interesting
year to see how IPTV takes off.
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Nokia Singapore
Chris Carr, General Manager
We expect more organisations to mobilise their
workforce. As information moves to the edge, the issue of
mobile enterprise security becomes pertinent to organisations.
More organisations will need to rethink their
security policies to ensure mobile devices are treated with
the same level of security as laptops. Device management will
also become increasingly important to manage the mobile solution
lifecycle from initial device provisioning, device and security
policy configuration, through to application deployment/configuration,
and continual device software and policy enforcement updates.
To successfully embrace business mobility, organisations also
need to look beyond technology and consider the people and
processes aspects.
Web 2.0 sites reflect the intrinsic need to
share common interests, to look for support, obtain information
and interact using text, voice and video. Today, mobile broadband
Internet connections are available on a wide variety of mobile
devices, making it possible for consumers to enjoy web browsing
similar to that they would experience at home or in the office.
Advances in mobile web browsers are also driving mobile Internet
usage, offering customers an enhanced experience while surfing
on the move.
In addition, we see location-based experiences
- such as mapping, routing and navigation - to be a fundamental
platform for many applications in our devices going forward.
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Sterling Commerce
Woo Peng Keong, Director, Software Development
Web-conferencing will become increasingly
common with the widespread use of broadband and IP Telephony.
Businesses will increasingly start to deploy RFIDs for tracking
goods in their supply chain, starting from 2007.
We see more businesses adopting Service-Oriented
Architecture (SOA) and Web Services to promote multi-enterprise
collaboration, as they become platforms of choice for businesses.
By 2007, most of the large organisations will have implemented
some basic Web Services, as they converge to adopt SOA.
As businesses become more connected, the demand
for multi-enterprise collaboration will increase. The challenge
will be to manage the growth of multi-enterprise business
processes without the cost and complexity with integrating
multiple applications. Security will continue to be a concern,
as more businesses becomes connected and inter-networked.
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Symantec
Bill Robbins, Senior Vice President, Asia Pacific and
Japan
In the coming year, Symantec expects to see
threat activity emerge in Microsoft Vista, through Web 2.0
adoption and within youth technologies.
With the new features and changes to Windows
Vista's code base, in conjunction with increased scrutiny
from security researchers and malicious code authors, previously
unseen attacks may be on the rise.
Interesting security trends using Web 2.0
technologies indicate that attacker interest and motivation
can be expected in the coming year. User-created content,
through blogs and social networking sites, can host browser
exploits, distribute malware/spyware, most unwanted ads (splogs),
or host links to malicious websites. As adoption rates for
Web services and syndicated content models increases, Symantec
has observed the beginnings of security issues as well.
The technologies embraced by today's youth
- such as instant messaging, text messaging and gaming - will
likely become a new battleground for online threats. Multi-player
online games have an escalating problem with threats that
are specific to stealing gaming assets within the game community.
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