Bonus $100
Promo Codes 2024
Users' Choice
90
89
88
85

Tech trends to expect in 2009

22 Dec 2008
00:00
Read More

Don't be surprised if during the course of 2009 you opt for a bigger TV screen because you're playing more video games and going to the movies less often. You won't be alone, says a longtime watcher of tech trends in his predictions for the coming year.

Mark Anderson is chief executive of Strategic News Service, a newsletter circulated to C-level tech executives. Each year he makes prognostications concerning technology and the economy. Last year he predicted a breakout year for ultramobile PCs, and he said Apple (AAPL) would launch one. The computer maker's MacBook Air came close. In late 2006, Anderson predicted the launch of the first PC with solid-state hard drives, which happened in 2007.

Here's a rundown of his expectations for 2009:

More screen time at home

With consumer spending on entertainment slowing down, consumers will happily spend more to improve their at-home entertainment experience instead of splurging on outings to restaurants, movies, and weekend getaways. That means bigger TV screens to connect to video game consoles for family rounds of Rock Band on the Sony (SNE) Playstation 3, Microsoft (MSFT) Xbox 360, or Nintendo (7974.T) Wii. 'People have been investing in bringing these screens into their homes for years, but very few of them are fully gamed up,' Anderson says. 'So I think there will be a lot of spending by people to get extra entertainment mileage out of those screens at very low cost.'

Tight budgets also will foster the proliferation of free or low-cost mobile-phone applications. Case in point: Apple's iPhone App Store on iTunes, where most applications are free"”and those that aren't usually sell for $10 or less. Consumers also can get cheap online software for Research In Motion's (RIMM) BlackBerry and phones running the various mobile operating systems backed by Nokia (NOK), Microsoft, and Google (GOOG). 'In terms of innovation and investment and purchase, phone applications are it for 2009,' Anderson says. 'Apple has already made it clear, and it's going to move out to other smartphones, and it's going to be a huge market.'

Smartphones are not only going to be running more applications, they'll also be capable of handling ever more complex tasks. Voice recognition will become both powerful, accurate, and common among mobile-phone applications, Anderson says. 'After 150 years of waiting, we'll get voice recognition everywhere,' he says. Such companies as Vlingo and Nuance (NUAN) will extend their technology into many applications. 'By the end of the year, more than a third of mobile users will be using voice recognition without thinking about it,' Anderson says.

Personal assistance

How will tiny cell phones handle all those new tasks‾ The short answer is they won't. New tools called Internet assistants will help wireless devices send demanding computing tasks via the wireless Web to other computers or to servers"”off in what's known as 'the cloud.' 'Someone is going to design a personal assistant"”by that I mean a suite of services, customized just for you, that exists on a server farm,' Anderson says. Mobile applications such as AroundMe on the iPhone are already pointing the way. 'You already see concierge services that tell you, when you land in a foreign city, what the cultural events are in that city, and get tickets for them, and things like that,' he says.

Anderson says the assistant technology would combine with tools that track consumer preferences to know what you need, such as preferences when you travel, all triggered by short messages from the user saying something like 'business trip, Los Angeles' or 'family vacation Miami.' 'You might have it rent you a midsize car when you travel alone on business, but when you're traveling with the family it might rent a minivan,' he says.

.

Related content

Rating: 5