Gartner Outlines 10 Mobile Technologies to Watch in 2010 and 2011

, Inc. has identified 10 technologies that will evolve significantly through 2011 in ways that will impact short-term strategies and policies. Investments in applications and technologies will increase through 2011 as organizations emerge from the recession and ramp up both business-to-employee (B2E) and business-to-consumer (B2C) spending.

“We are highlighting these 10 technologies that should be on every organization’s radar screen,” said Nick Jones, vice president and distinguished analyst at . “These technologies were selected because they will evolve in ways that affect corporate strategies, significant numbers of customers or employees will adopt or expect them, or they will address particular challenges that organizations will face through 2011.”

The 10 technologies to watch in 2010 and 2011 include:

Bluetooth (3 and 4)
Two new Bluetooth versions will emerge by 2011: Bluetooth 3 will introduce 802.11 as a bearer for faster data transmission, and Bluetooth 4 will introduce a new low-energy (LE) mode that will enable communication with external peripherals and sensors. Both versions will include other technical improvements to improve battery life and security. believes that Bluetooth 3 will facilitate corporate and consumer functions demanding large bandwidth (e.g., downloading images and videos from handsets). Bluetooth LE will enable a range of new sensor-based business models in industries such as fitness, healthcare and environmental control and will be used by handset and PC peripherals to enable new functions, such as PCs that autolock when users move away from them.

The Web
By 2011, over 85 percent of handsets shipped globally will include some form of browser. In mature markets, such as Western Europe and Japan, approximately 60 percent of handsets shipped will be smartphones with sophisticated browsing capability and the ability to render conventional HTML sites in some manner. The growth in smartphones with relatively large and high-resolution screens will encourage greater numbers of people to access conventional websites on devices, and will make it possible to deliver some B2C applications using conventional Web tools without adaptation. In mature markets, the Web, along with associated Web adaptation tools, will be a leading technology for B2C applications through 2012, and should be part of every organization’s B2C technology portfolio.

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