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SMALL BUSINESS
KACE™ Reveals Top 2010 Predictions in Systems Management
Windows 7 Helps the Industry Forget Vista While Apple Strengthens Its Grip on the Enterprise
Business Wire
KACE,
the leading systems management appliance company, today revealed its top
10 predictions in 2010 that will impact systems management. KACE
predicts widespread Windows 7 deployment will make the new Microsoft
operating system the most popular enterprise-used OS since XP. A recent
survey by ChangeWave backs this claim showing Windows 7 has helped fuel
corporate PC sales in December to reach their highest level since 2008.
“Windows 7 has thrust the importance of operating system innovation
front and center in the eyes of corporations worldwide,” said Marty
Kacin, founder and CTO of KACE. “The adoption of new operating systems
in 2010 is not just a Microsoft phenomenon, but one significantly
impacting Apple and Linux vendors as well.”
KACE’s top predictions for 2010 include:
1.
Windows 7 will become first Windows OS to see widespread
deployment even before release of its first service pack.
With the misstep of Vista, the vast majority of enterprises, both large
and small, stayed with Windows XP as their operating system of choice,
an operating system first released nine years ago. Organizations put off
updating their Windows machines for as long as possible and now that
Windows 7 has proved stable and is being favorably received by end
users, the rush for IT organizations to update to Windows 7 will
commence.
2.
Mac OS X will make further inroads in the enterprise and will more
than double its current market share.
Vista’s failure and the growing popularity of Apple technology at home
has paved the way for Mac adoption to push beyond its toehold in the
enterprise and be taken seriously as an alternative OS to Windows. With
the advent of cross-platform management tools, more IT organizations are
lifting their restrictions of support for non-Windows operating systems,
allowing an increased freedom of choice. End users will respond and
choose the technology with which they are familiar and have had positive
experiences.
3.
Virtual desktop technology (VDI) will continue to find only niche
market uses; New “virtual composite workspaces” will emerge as a
competing and more viable alternative.
VDI will meet limited success due to its complexity, expense and
connectivity requirements. Virtual composite workspace technology, the
unification and discrete management of the logical layers in the
endpoint-computing stack will emerge as a preferred means for desktop
virtualization. Because each layer (platform, application, data and user
personality) is manageable and deployable discretely, virtual composite
workspaces will deliver improved manageability along with increased
accessibility and mobility for end users.
4.
Security and management concerns will slow and dampen cloud
computing euphoria; Cloud attached computing will supplant traditional
thinking of cloud deployments.
Cloud services remain in their infancy with few broad production
implementations. As more typical organizations seek to take advantage of
cloud computing, they will need to grapple with issues surrounding data
privacy, service level agreements, management capabilities, and more
that will slow the adoption of the new computing paradigm. As result,
they will increasingly turn to hybrid cloud and on-premise enterprise
solutions.
5.
Enterprises will see an overall decrease in desktop power
consumption as new green IT-friendly hardware and software are deployed.
While the data center has been the main focus to date, desktop power
consumption will become just as important as more and more organizations
deploy new desktops and laptops with lower power consumption
requirements and new power management technology that will allow them to
reduce power usage through a wider range of power saving configurations.
6.
IT organizations’ PC refresh cycles will spike this year, earlier
than anticipated, due to mass Windows 7 adoption.
The global economic slowdown, coupled with the failure of Vista has
driven many IT organizations to delay their normal PC refresh cycles.
The new hardware requirements of Windows 7 will force organizations to
accelerate their already pent-up demand for new desktops and laptops.
7.
Setup.exe will become a legacy means to distribute applications.
As technologies such as application virtualization mature and Web
applications continue to grow in popularity, the traditional method of
software distribution will begin to quickly shift to a more vertical
means.
8.
Security vulnerabilities “attack zones” will shift to Web-based
applications.
Traditionally, the principal point of attack by hackers has come from
e-mail attachments. With the advent of e-mail security systems and
increased end user awareness, the attacks will shift to popular
Web-based services such as Facebook, Twitter and salesforce.com as
hackers seek and find “holes” in these popular Web-based applications.
9.
Multiple Mobile OS’ will delay effective device management in the
enterprise.
Blackberry, iPhone, Palm and now Android-based mobile phones have become
mission-critical business tools and have moved beyond simple e-mail,
contacts and calendaring. For enterprise IT departments, mobile
management is key, but the growing disparity of mobile OS’ and lack of
standardization will hamper desired enterprise management.
10.
Software vendors will roll out new tools and technologies to
increase license audit capabilities.
The economic slowdown prompted both enterprise and consumer software
vendors to increase license compliance audit activity and vigilance.
These same vendors will increasingly develop increased audit
capabilities directly into their products and deliver new tools to
continue to more closely monitor and audit overall license usage.
These predictions are based on what KACE sees firsthand from systems
management deployments across the globe and from the company’s more than
1,400 worldwide customers.
KACE
saves
its customers both time and money. Systems managers are increasingly
forced to wear many hats throughout the day to work on a myriad of IT
functions. KACE helps consolidate these functions by providing a single
appliance for all projects, while delivering easy-to-use, comprehensive
systems management that is affordable. The
KBOX™
family of systems management and deployment appliances fulfills all
of the systems management needs of an enterprise, from initial computer
deployment to ongoing management and retirement.
About KACE™
KACE™ is the leading systems management appliance company. The
award-winning KBOX™ family of appliances delivers easy-to-use,
comprehensive systems management capabilities. KACE customers usually
install in one day and enjoy the lowest total cost compared to software
alternatives.
KACE is headquartered in Mountain View, California. To learn more about
KACE and its product offerings, please visit
http://www.kace.com
or call 1-877-MGMT-DONE.
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Copyright Business Wire 2010
2010-01-13 07:15:00
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