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Software Development Predictions For 2009

snydeq writes "Fatal Exception's Neil McAllister lays out his development predictions for 2009. These include further struggles from Microsoft in retooling its image, a more open source mindset for Java, twilight for Sun, the Web as platform of choice, and a dearth of innovation due to dwindling economic prospects. 'When customers aren't buying, tool vendors don't innovate — so don't expect many groundbreaking new technologies to debut this year,' McAllister writes, adding that smart companies will realize that 'process automation is one of the best ways to reduce costs in any business,' making 2009 the ideal time to 'revisit old software schemes that got shelved back when staffing budgets were flush.'"

8 of 134 comments (clear)

  1. On the contrary by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Historical trend shows that when the economy is in a recession/crisis/bad shape, that's when people turn towards the radically new. Sort of like a forest fire, it opens up opportunities for startups and new things.

    --
    It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
    Be yourself no matter what they say
    1. Re:On the contrary by ionix5891 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      thats assuming the rotten trees get burned and leave space for fresh younglings

      in our case the rotten trees got bailed out

    2. Re:On the contrary by supersnail · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sorry but I cant think of a single company/brand/product that had its origins in the Great Depression.

      Up till 2002 the software industry was counter-cyclic with the rest of the economy. When times got tough companies spent more on computers and associated software to save costs or gain competetive edge.

      But the low hanging fruit is gone and IT departments are just another big budget item that needs cutting. Particularly in the current cluster f***ed economy -- can you think of any software that would get you easier, indeed any, credit from the bank, or, software that would help you sell your latest high tech gizmo to someone who just lost thier job and is having thier mortgage foreclosed?

      Spending on sex, gambling and drugs goes up in hard times, but, the first two are a done deal as far a software is concerned and the third is in a market so free that the competition will kill you.

               

      --
      Old COBOL programmers never die. They just code in C.
    3. Re:On the contrary by Sobrique · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Not at all - low hanging fruit may be gone, but 'sloppy' implementations of IT systems are widespread and rife. I do IT for an 'outsource support' provider - many of our customers are in a position where revisiting their IT systems and working practices around them will provide massive dividends.

      Whether they will or not, is another matter - I suspect it's much more likely that they're going to keep their heads down, and work to 'lowest common denominator' IT services.

    4. Re:On the contrary by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Sorry but I cant think of a single company/brand/product that had its origins in the Great Depression.

      Hewlett-Packard is one.

      Spending on sex, gambling and drugs goes up in hard times, but, the first two are a done deal as far a software is concerned and the third is in a market so free that the competition will kill you.

      Apparently, people also still tend to buy video games, lucky for me. Naturally, no industry is *completely* free of belt-tightening, but among my circle of friends and colleagues, the market appears to be reasonably stable.

      You also have to keep in mind that *most* people, even in this economy, are employed and still doing well. The US unemployment rate is at,what, around 6.7 percent or so, or about one in every fifteen people? Around 4 percent of the country is ALWAYS employed, generally due to some chronic issue (can't or won't work for some reason) or just due to normal between-job transitions. It sounds about right - I've been unemployed for about 5 percent of my career. It doesn't take much - a six month stretch in an otherwise employed 10 year career.

      The economy slows down not necessarily when people are in dire straits, but when they reign in their spending for fear their job may be next on the cutting block. Expenses may go up a bit, the belts get a bit tighter, which propagates to others. But even in good times, businesses try not to spend money frivolously anyhow. Besides, there are always going to be businesses and people that are surviving, even thriving during these times.

      But the low hanging fruit is gone and IT departments are just another big budget item that needs cutting. Particularly in the current cluster f***ed economy -- can you think of any software that would get you easier, indeed any, credit from the bank, or, software that would help you sell your latest high tech gizmo to someone who just lost thier job and is having thier mortgage foreclosed?

      What makes software and IT so special that it can be cut before everything else? Businesses of all types and sizes are more reliant on computers than ever before, and those needs don't disappear during a slow economy. Sure, you won't see an orgy of tech spending like during dot-com booms, but no company in their right minds would just axe their IT department any more than they'd eliminate their accounting department.

      Spending on sex, gambling and drugs goes up in hard times, but, the first two are a done deal as far a software is concerned and the third is in a market so free that the competition will kill you.

      Apparently, people also still tend to buy video games, lucky for me. Naturally, no industry is *completely* free of belt-tightening, but among my circle of friends and colleagues, the market appears to be reasonably stable. And our companies all purchase other software on a regular basis. The economy still works in lean times, just a little more slowly and a little less comfortably.

      --
      Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
  2. 2009 by mrthoughtful · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hm. How about this:
    (1) The majorty of humanity will carry on buying OEM MS operating systems
    (2) Apple will produce something sleek, shiny, and expensive
    (3) Linux users will think that 2009 will be when Linux will move (at last) into the mainstream userbase. They will be wrong.
    (4) The majority of humanity will carry on using Internet Explorer, which will continue to annoy every web developer who doesn't have a MS qualification.
    (5) Sun will trudge on.
    (6) Cloud computing will still be used by academics and hackers.
    (7) Java will continue to have it's mixture of fans and foes. But not much else.
    (8) Same goes for BEA, etc.
    (9) Innovation will happen in ways that you least expect.
    (10) Oh - that year went by so fast.
    (11) But now I am out of a job because the banks took my money and made a profit, then made a loss and took my money again.

    --
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    1. Re:2009 by Eivind · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Probably most of these will be true, it's hardly surprising that mostly the world continues as it has.

      The IE-thing though, I see sligthly differently. It's true that most people use IE. But it is also true that IE has seen a steady decline the last 2 years. Like you, I think the trends will continue much as they are, but that still means a continous downwards trend.

      For the websites we run at work (I work for a web-development company that carries the websites of around 1500 norwegian companies, including a dozen of the larger ones) 2 years ago we saw 80% IE on average (more on grandma-type websites, less on technical ones), one year ago it was at about 73%, and now in december it was at 65%.

      I don't care much about IE, but I do care about healthy competition. My ideal world would have no single browser above 50%. That's the best guarantee that people will not develop exclusively for ONE browser.

    2. Re:2009 by wisty · · Score: 5, Funny

      (12) Lispers will remain quietly smug. Except Paul Graham, who will be vocally smug.
      (13) Pythoneers will remain vocally smug, except Guido who is busy doing real work.
      (14) Open source software development remain 5 years ahead of Microsofts, except for the GUI, which lags by a decade.
      (15) Someone will write a new distributed version control system.
      (16) New web frameworks are written in Python (x3), Ruby (x2) and Cobol. Database work is still difficult.
      (17) .net is upgraded to another version. Nobody had figured out what the previous version did.
      (18) Scrum get's a new acronym, to the disgust of its advocates.
      (19) Outside of a select few programmers and /.ers, nobody in the real world cares.