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Big Data for the year ahead: 10 predictions

By | December 7, 2010, 10:16am PST

Summary: 2011 will be the year of ‘Big Data’ — and big challenges for those maintaining IT infrastructures.

The era of Big Data has only just begun.  In the latest edition of Database Trends & Applications, I provided a series of predictions, based on input from industry experts and vendors, about the year ahead, with an emphasis on data management. Here are 10 of them:

1. Big Data calls for big realignment: The relentless growth of data is leading to a phenomenon now referred to as “Big Data.” This will create new performance and budget headaches for companies.

2. Advanced and predictive analytics: Advanced analytics will take decision-making to the next level over more current rudimentary forms, such as online analytic processing (OLAP).

3. Shift from IT to the business user: More mashups, apps, and feeds their users are building and generating to manipulate data, over more devices.

4. More cloud-based services: More companies are packaging and virtualizing their own IT assets into “cloud”-like services to offer across various departments and divisions, and even to outside partners.

5. Emergence of Data as a Service: Along with the growth of private cloud-based services, expect the rise of “Data as a Service” (DaaS) approaches to enterprise data management.

6. Master Data Management and Business Process Management convergence.

7. “Data monetization”: There may be big value in Big Data, but the question many companies will be grappling with over the coming year is how to find and extract that value.

8. Rise of unstructured and Internet data in enterprises: Organizations have been struggling with unstructured data - such as graphical or video files - for years. Add Web-based or social data to the mix.

9. Data “app stores”: The app stores now offered through Apple and other other vendors are providing a working model for enterprises to offer and distribute data.

10. Multi-platform and multi-skills: As one expert put it: “Single-platform shops are becoming as rare as an ice cube in the Sahara.”

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Joe McKendrick is an author, consultant and speaker specializing in trends and developments shaping the technology industry.

Disclosure

Joe McKendrick

Joe McKendrick is an independent consultant, editor and speaker.

Joe has performed project work (white papers, articles, blogs, research and presentations) for the following companies in the IT marketspace:

  • CBS Interactive/CNET/ZDNet (this blog)
  • ebizQ
  • Evans Data
  • Gartner
  • IBM
  • Informatica
  • IDC
  • Microsoft
  • Systinet/HP
  • Teradata
  • Unisphere Reseach, a division of Information Today, Inc.
  • WebLayers

Joe has also performed research work for the following sponsoring organizations in partnership with Unisphere Research, a division of Information Today, Inc.

  • IBM
  • Luminex
  • Noetix
  • Oracle Corp.
  • Teradata
  • Informatica
  • International Oracle Users Group
  • Oracle Applications Users Group
  • Professional Association for SQL Server
  • International DB2 Users Group
  • International Sybase Users Group
  • SHARE (IBM large systems users group)

Biography

Joe McKendrick

Joe McKendrick is an author and independent analyst who tracks the impact of information technology on management and markets. Joe is co-author, along with 16 leading industry leaders and thinkers, of the SOA Manifesto, which outlines the values and guiding principles of service orientation. He also speaks frequently on Enterprise 2.0 and SOA topics at industry events and Webcasts, and serves on the program committee for this year's SOA & Cloud Symposium in London. As an independent analyst, he has also authored numerous research reports in partnership with Unisphere Research, a division of Information Today, Inc. for user groups such as SHARE, Oracle Applications Users Group, and International DB2 Users Group. In a previous life, Joe served as director of the Administrative Management Society (AMS), an international professional association dedicated to advancing knowledge within the IT and business management fields. He is a graduate of Temple University.

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RE: Big Data for the year ahead: 10 predictions
raggi 9th Dec 2010
In memory (RAM) high speed databases.
It's mind boggling why none of the big guys have designed databases designed to reside totally in RAM. Current designs (Oracle, MSsql) don't cut it and are not designed for machines with loads of RAM, say 64GB or more.
0 Votes
+ -
I'm surprised that Internet TV, Tablet Devices (like the iPad), and Kinect didn't make the list, but perhaps those are outside the "Data Management" subject. Either way, I think they will be major trends.

Brett Miller
http://www.customsoftwarebypreston.com/blog
0 Votes
+ -
The open source R language has become the de facto standard for predictive analytics. For a whitepaper on 'WHY R IS HOT', please visit:

http://bit.ly/9RhIpf

[registration required]
In memory (RAM) high speed databases.
It's mind boggling why none of the big guys have designed databases designed to reside totally in RAM. Current designs (Oracle, MSsql) don't cut it and are not designed for machines with loads of RAM, say 64GB or more.

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