Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud.
We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
"In 2007, venture capitalists pumped a record $1.34 billion into 178 Web
2.0 deals in the US, an increase of 88 per cent on the previous year...""
Web 2.0 and The Enterprise is a new report that examines how the
underlying concepts behind Web 2.0 and the technologies and services it
enables are filtering into the corporate world.
While there is much debate in the industry about the nature of Web 2.0
and an exact definition of the term, there is no denying that the
services and technologies it has engendered are becoming deeply
entrenched in the consumer world. Internet-savvy consumers especially
those aged 18-34 are as comfortable with social networking, blogging and
twittering as they are with using the phone or writing an email.
Identify and exploit the opportunities arising from the implementation
of Web 2.0 applications in enterprise technology with the help of this
new report...
This report will enable you to…
-Understand the impact of Web 2.0 on the enterprise across collaboration
and marketing and how its application differs across key sectors
-Assess the risks associated with implementing Web 2.0 with this report’s
examination of key drivers, inhibitors and case study analysis of Web
2.0 in action.
-Quantify the market potential of Web 2.0 using this report’s
sizing data for key market segments (e.g. the online advertising and
social networking advertising opportunities) and IT spending priorities
for different-sized organisations
-Create more effective Web 2.0 sales and enterprise implementation
strategies based on this report’s analysis of
key vendors providing Web 2.0 solutions in terms of their strengths,
weaknesses and best practices.
Some key questions answered by this report...
-What are Web 2.0 and Web 3.0?
-Who are the leading vendors of Web 2.0?
-What is driving take-up of Web 2.0?
-How can Web 2.0 be applied to the enterprise environment?
-What is the best way to sell Web 2.0 to organisations?
-Why are Web 2.0 companies receiving such high valuations?
-What are the challenges in rolling out Web 2.0?
-Will the Web 2.0 bubble burst?
-Innovations in the Management of Diabetes
-Next generation treatments and market dynamics
Key issues examined in this report...
-Advertising on social networks, applications or widgets. In 2007,
eMarketer predicted around $900 million would be spent on advertising
through social networking sites in the US and $335 million elsewhere.
-Consumer innovation in The Enterprise. Military and commercial
enterprises used to lead technology but increasing consumer uptake of
Web 2.0 is leaving the enterprise having to play catch-up.
-Barriers to the take-up of Web 2.0. These include: enterprise security
fears; confidentiality and return on investment; network traffic
congestion; arguments over who should pay for increased bandwidth usage
and the threat of legal action online.
-Web 2.0 collaboration. The benefits for the enterprise include tapping
into the ‘wisdom of crowds’,
bypassing email as a communications method, flexibility in creating Web
2.0 applications on an ad hoc basis and genuine knowledge sharing.