Sat, May 26, 2012, 5:20 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed

10 Tech Themes and Forecasts for 2012

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The past few years I have stuck my neck out on the line and come up with Themes and Predictions for the upcoming year. 2011 was no different. I not only hit on different technology trends, but also tried to predict which companies would and would not be taken over this past year. I had a lot of fun doing this and it is almost scary how well things worked out for these selections. You can go back and read my 2011 Themes and Forecast if you like, but for now, take a look at the stocks I removed from the M&A possibilities list and notice that not only was every single stock not acquired, but all of them except Fortinet (FTNT) was down on the year with the average loss being much worse than the market at -17.3%. This was a really good basket of stocks to have avoided as they were overpriced. This prediction was on the money.

Of the eight companies I mentioned that were likely to be acquired, five had either been acquired, merged or signed agreements to be acquired before the end of 2011. One company split itself into two pieces and I believe the other two are still in play to be acquired. If you would have purchased this basket of stocks, you would have scored a 21.3% gain, easily beating the market in general by a wide margin. If you could have somehow purchased shares of Skype or MySpace on the secondary market or simply avoided Sprint (S), which was the real stinker of the group, you could have done much better. Take a look at how the M&A list performed here.

So to recap the highlights of last year's forecasts M&A was definitely hot in 2011, the economy muddled along with uncertainty being a dominant theme, Apple (AAPL) did obtain the largest cap in the world shortly before the passing of Steve Jobs, smartphones and tablets continued to invade corporations at a rapid pace and Microsoft (MSFT) got it right with Lync being a breakout product for the company.

So what about 2012? Here we go, beginning with M&A.

1. M&A

I think M&A will cool down some after the blistering pace of 2011. Most likely we will see smaller deals done as tuck-ins to round out the portfolios of larger entities. The market is definitely ripe for IT service provider consolidation, security related entities, wireless players and for some more strategic cloud acquisitions where I expect the carriers to be active.

- InterDigital (IDCC) – If you haven't heard of InterDigital before don't feel bad as it is not a household name, however, many of the brands you know and love have to utilize its patents. With so many companies being taken off the board in 2011 including the acquisition of Motorola (MMI) by Google (GOOG), the InterDigital wireless portfolio looks mighty impressive and the stock is trading just a little above its lows for the year.

- Nokia (NOK) – See a pattern beginning to emerge here?  Here is another undervalued wireless play. This is also a major partner of Microsoft trying to compete with the market leaders Apple and Google. This stock is trading close to or slightly below book value. I think this stock could head lower first since Lumia has not done well, but keep an eye on them.

- Research in Motion (RIMM) – I will not stoop to insulting diehard Blackberry users as I still have one or two friends that love them. The problem for RIM is that one or two diehard customers here or there is not going to help it recover quickly enough.  But there is some good news. Even though Apple and Google have been declared winners of the smartphone wars, this will not stop Microsoft and others from continuing to try. The market is just too big for them to walk away from. Just look at Hewlett-Packard's (HPQ) ill-advised purchase of Palm not so long ago. Sooner or later Microsoft, HP, Oracle (ORCL), IBM (IBM), Amazon (AMZN), Dell (DELL) or someone else will decide that the market is just too big not to have a player in the game, and with the market cap getting smaller by the day and no debt, there is a good possibility that someone finally makes a play for the company this year.

- Here are a few more names that have good potential to be taken over in 2012: InterNAP (INAP), Netflix (NFLX), Sprint, Riverbed (RVBD), Zix (ZIXI), and Tekelec (TKLC).

2. Dot-Com Implosion 2.0?

Though having real products, many of the Web 2.0 companies we know, love and hate have seen stratospheric growth and valuations. While these are real companies unlike what we saw 10 years ago, we now have some very big expectations to fill. There are a number of high-profile companies readying to come public and one has to wonder if the valuations that are being thrown around are realistic. Just looking at the performance of recent IPOs in this space has to make one cautious at this point. Perhaps the Facebook IPO will tell the story.

3. Voice Recognition Goes Mainstream

I know you have already heard more than enough about Siri, but the bottom line is that everyone has been playing with this technology for years. Microsoft has made a huge investment along with a number of other companies and yet none of them have had the success that Apple has had in such a short time. This consumer-driven technology will now find its way through every business.

4. Windows 8

Given that enterprises are still upgrading to Windows 7, the biggest impact of Windows 8 may be on either side of the desktop.

- Since it will enable PCs and tablets to turn on instantly and potentially run all day, finally the Mac Air will have some legitimate competition. I have also heard developer chatter about a number of Windows 8-powered tablets that have the power of a PC inside, enabling a much wider range of applications than current tablets. Look for Windows 8 to drive Ultrabook and sophisticated tablet sales.

- The server side of the house will also benefit as Microsoft is boasting a greatly upgraded hypervisor. While Hyper V3 will probably not match everything VMware (VMW) can do, it should pressure pricing and provide end-users with more options.

5. iTV

When was the last time you were really excited about a television? I think there are legs to the iTV story in 2012. Just look at Steve Jobs' own words on this the television experience as penned by Walter Isaacson in his biography of Jobs. Here's what Jobs said: "I'd like to create an integrated television set that is completely easy to use. It would be seamlessly synched with all of your devices and with iCloud. It will have the simplest user interface you could imagine. I finally cracked it." I am willing to believe that he did in fact crack it, and that the first product ships before year-end.

6. M2M

While Machine-to-Machine (M2M) potential has been discussed for some time, we are finally seeing a number of products begin to enter the market and fill a niche. Even more interesting is that these offerings are beginning to be integrated with other multi-function devices, meaning that this technology is about ready to go mainstream. Look for a wide variety of products to deliver additional value to businesses across the marketplace, beginning with verticals.

7. Smart Wallet

Mobile-enabled payment solutions definitely have interest. With both Android and iOS devices expected to come with Near Field Communications (or NFC) chips built in, we could this technology gain momentum in the US very shortly.

8. HTML 5

With Flash biting the dust there will be a mad rush to HTML 5. This will make many websites much more friendly to end-users. The prediction is that HTML 5 will cut down on the need to design customer-downloadable apps. This could make it easier for enterprises to deploy solutions, but I don't see the app store going away anytime soon. There is too much profit motive and the benefit of control for it to disappear.

9. Education

Education will be greatly impacted by the tablet explosion – look no further than our local librarians giving lessons on how to utilize your tablet with the public library system. Even more amazing than the technology itself is the incredible amount of talent that can be pooled and captured on a single platform to make learning easier. If you haven't watched a Khan Academy lesson with your children or for your own benefit, you just don't know what you are missing. They have topics on anything you could imagine including math, science, history and art with more lessons being added all the time.

10. Security

2011 got us talking about custom malware attacks that seemed almost like something out of a spy thriller. Expect even more custom attempts in 2012. Personally Identifiable Information (or PII) will also gain increased visibility as states, companies and consumers all become more concerned.

What do you see happening in 2012?

Editor's Note: This article was originally published on Liquid Networx.



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5 comments

  • James  •  Toronto, Canada  •  4 months ago
    Apple is the 6th generation.

    The last generation, the 5th generation, was a massive technological movement through computer language constructs harnessing machine powers to do repetitive manual human work, thus the simulated learning intelligence deployed on machines giving artificial intelligence on robotics. Japan owned the 5th generation.
  • James  •  Toronto, Canada  •  4 months ago
    Apple fusion is the unibody engine fusing of the hardware based instruction sets dynamically burned into the Ax (A4, A5, A6 in the iPhone and iPad) with the successive software iOS which DNA level mastery of the underlying hardware, firmware, software, apps and services. Thus, Apple Fusion = Ax + iOS. This is the reason Google is acquiring MMI, and Microsoft partnering with Nokia. Companies like Research in Motion have no strategic SoC like Apple Ax, and no OS of any value, this is the reason no one is even remotely interested in Rim in any fashion, subscriber bases can melt away overnight, Rim's ancient network can't even compete with 3G, let alone the 4G LTE. Rim's patents are quite worthless because the new LTE use different principles and technologies.
  • James  •  Toronto, Canada  •  4 months ago
    Will SAP change its Netweaver portal into Netweaver Smart Vortal? Without Apple Siri, SAP and similar business stacks lack Apple's $86 Billion cash which almost guarantees elimination of any lesser 6th generation NL movements. SAP's only hope will be through Apple's Fusion (Ax iOS) and a near total rewrite of the Netweaver Portal and its development strategies which will be based on Apple Fusion (Ax iOS) as Apple iPad claims the throne as the universal user device.
  • James  •  Toronto, Canada  •  4 months ago
    SV, or Smart Vortal, will be the rage as Apple Siri launches a 'sixth generation' extending the 'fifth generation' natural language (NL) with today's web service Vortal technologies that are currently using Nuance's Vortal. The NL function is within Siri and Apple will spend billions of dollars on the Siri NL while the Nuance Vortal is a generic component that competes with others like Quack, Cisco, Microsoft which have no NL function. IBM DirectTalk pioneered the Vortal genre thru IVR like everything else IBM did, DirectTalk was wedded with telephony and a syntactic parsing architecture that died with analog telephony. Steve Jobs's genius shone through by stacking the 5th generation NL to the Vortal and by pipping Siri to the iCloud has established a super user lock-in that are making all the competitions crying Uncle and in the future will demand iCloud access for non-Apple devices through anti-monopoly measures, because a multi-lingual humanized conversational portal (Siri) into the petaflops supercomputer driven iCloud is impossible for any other company to compete against.

    Siri is really the 6th generation specializing in NL. Japan spent billions of dollars in its 5th generation resulting in robotics, IBM and others in expert systems which is today's flimsy Business Intelligence which is quite useless and risky business, none have gone far except succeeding only in cutting down human jobs as all manufacturing are going robotics with Artificial Intelligence. Apple's 6th generation is much more flexible and productive yet economical than the 5th generation, Apple's 6th generation is a human victory that will reclaim human mastery over the machines, and in turn create billions of new jobs using Apple's 6th generation technologies. NL is the only worthwhile endeavor for the human community. Good going, Apple, and may God bless your 6th generation through Siri.
  • James  •  Toronto, Canada  •  4 months ago
    Siri is far more than voice recognition software, Siri is similar to a portal using conversations, or a Voice Portal that learns. Expect Siri to completely alter the human / machine relationship that would disband the use of keyboard and mice, and the extremely cumbersome navigational screens.
 
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