Wars will no longer be fought in battlefields. They will be fought, not with
megaton bombs, but with megabits of data. These wars might be virtual, but the
winners will be real. It's up to you to decide; you can be the master of the
Web or a meager fly caught in its fibers.
I wrote a series of articles about the Web Technologies in the first few
issues of DQ Channels. I believed in the technologies then and I still believe
in them. The foolish investors who rushed to invest billions of dollars in the
new technologies created the dot com bubble, which burst in due course. It left
behind devastation on the Wall Street and a powerful set of Web technologies and
a priceless infrastructure connecting the entire world-the World Wide Web of
Optical Fibers.
Carly Fiorina, the former HP CEO, was one of the first few visionaries to
realize what was happening. She declared in her public speeches that the dot-com
boom and bust was just 'the end of the beginning'. She said, "The last
25 years in technology have just been the warm-up act. Now we are going into the
main event." This will be an era in which technology will truly transform
every aspect of business, of government, of society and of life.
Get connected
It is going to be an era of smart and pervasive technologies, pulling
together the benefits of different technologies and application platforms. The
world is shrinking and getting completely covered by the so-called Internet
cloud! Just plug in to this cloud and everything will be accessible to you, from
the industrial controllers in your factory to the home security system in your
house. Some people prefer to call it the all-IP future.
As always, there will be many standards, hyped up claims and competing
solutions garbed in different jargons. Solution providers will need to focus
more on the real customer value rather than getting entangled in the hype.
Solutions that connect people to their business in the virtual world to produce
results in the real world will assume utmost importance.
According
to Thomas L Friedman, the author of 'The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the
Twenty-First Century', globalization has entered a whole new phase and the
flattening of the world has already begun. He realized this when talking to
Nandan Nilekani of Infosys, when Nandan said during the course of the
conversation, "Tom, the playing field is being leveled."
Massive investments in technology, especially the millions of dollars
invested in putting broadband connectivity around the world have culminated in
making powerful means of communication available to people across the globe. It
doesn't matter anymore if you are in Boston, Bangalore or Beijing.
Such advances in the worldwide connectivity have helped in deploying supply
chain management and other enterprise solutions in such a way that buyers like
Wal-Mart can accurately control the goods being produced for them in far away
lands like China. Voice and Video over IP allow vendors to stay connected and
interact in real time with their customers in all parts of the world. This makes
it a true 24/7 business environment.
Broadband: The all purpose tool
The Megabit wars are already on. While the US is still happy with two
megabits speeds, South Korea is surging ahead with 20 megabits speeds. The South
Koreans are using their smart phones in the business, schools and homes for
e-mail, video-conferencing, e-learning, banking, stock trading, shopping, bill
payments, entertainment and many other things.
In Seoul and other large cities like Busan, broadband (wired or wireless) has
become as basic a utility as water or electricity. Solutions based on smart
phones as a user interface will soon become all pervasive. 39.5 million South
Koreans - of a total population of 48.5 million — are expected to carry
broadband-enabled handsets by 2008. The speeds are expected to touch 100
Megabits by 2012.
With hardware sizes shrinking everyday, tremendous computing power can now be
packed into handheld devices like PDAs and smart phones. Multiple wireless
communication options from low power — short-range to high power — long
range are becoming available with built-in security. A smart phone can directly
connect you to security systems, industrial controllers, access-control systems,
medical devices, environmental controls, and building-automation systems.
In a truly 24/7 scenario, a production supervisor from a chemical plant might
receive a process alert on his smart phone at home directly from a process
control system. Without having to go to the plant in the middle of the night, he
could then log on to the control system from his smart phone and make
adjustments to the parameters through the graphical user interface on the device's
screen to bring the system back on track. He could even send an instant report
to his superiors about the situation.
Symbian as operating system
Smart phones, PDAs and other such devices will ultimately converge into a
pervasive-computing interface, which will almost become an extension of the
user, allowing transparent interaction with the world through the Internet
Cloud!
User authentication will also be built-in to such devices through biometric
sensors. There is no standardization in sight yet, as these devices are powered
by different operating systems such as Symbian, Palm, Linux, Blackberry,
Microsoft, and other proprietary operating systems running on different
processors.
Symbian is currently the leading Smart Phone operating system, accounting for
a very large share of worldwide shipments. For the developers of interfacing
solutions, it is still a difficult task, as each operating system requires
different software-development and maintenance tools. To simplify the problems
on the user side, the only way is to restrict Smart Phone users to a common
service provider and a single handset model.
Various types of miniature Web Server Modules, just about a square inch in
size, are available as drop-in boards that provide a serial interface on one
side and an Ethernet interface on the other. With the networking software built
in to the modules, these can be used to build smart phone compatible
embedded-systems. The World Wide Web Wars will be fought and won using these
smart gadgets!
The author is an independent consultant, and can be reached at: Ashok
Dongre