Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Commercial Offers Letter

technology "Cloud" code in the future of mobile broadband


mobile phone applications should be open to multiple devices in order to exploit broadband mobile and cloud computing (a term that refers to a structure in which both data storage and processing take place outside the mobile device from which the application is launched), according to a study published in broadbandfinder.co.uk. Randall Stephenson, chief executive of AT & T said that customers increasingly expect their mobile devices in the future, especially in the use of applications over wireless broadband.

Speaking at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, \u200b\u200bsaid: " talked about mobile broadband, three or four years ago and is now ubiquitous and part of business and society, and the same is happening with tag." Also he added that "open systems interoperable are vital, like mobile broadband, and the capabilities of cloud computing will drive the next wave of growth in mobile broadband ."

According to him, in fact, this has already been seen in a big way to the Amazon Kindle. Kindle's ability to be " the device and network agnostic "was a step" brave and intelligent "from Amazon, he added. According to Randall Stephenson, the ability to access the software on multiple devices will become the center of the whole mobile ecosystem.

The truth is that, according to International Data Corporation (IDC), cloud computing models will experience strong growth in the coming years. For the Corporation, the software system that manages the tag will be worth more than 2,500 billion by 2015.

In this sense, the adoption of the cloud is coming to an important moment and in fact are becoming the trend to the point that, according to IDC, between 2010 and 2015 to grow 45.5% annually.

addition, the software is set to be technology priority for CIOs in the UK, according to the 2E2. Service Firm Information Technology said that the model cloud computing offer greater flexibility and are a low cost alternative to traditional technology.

Source: 20minutos.es

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