Cisco gets over-excited about IoE.
Cisco
has been thinking big on what it's been calling the Internet of Everything. At
a recent press event it came up with $14.4 trillion total value by 2022. This
might make other interested parties nervous.
Oh
dear. Remember the Gartner hype cycle? It was a wonderfully Tolkienesque take
on IT tech hype. The hype cycle starts, said Gartner, with some sort of
technology trigger/breakthrough and then moves quickly up to the Peak of Inflated Expectations , plunges into the
Trough of Disillusionment, trudges wearily up the Slope of Enlightenment until
closure is reached on the Plateau of Productivity.
The
problem is that Cisco's latest numerical outpouring may be urging the industry
to climb the dreaded Peak
of Inflated Expectations .
Just sayin'.
So
hype or what? After all, Cisco has form on big number-itis - in fact it
recently downgraded its projections on data growth across the Internet. Might
it not be getting over-excited again?
Cisco's
own definition of the 'Internet of Everything' wraps up the current Internet
and all its doings (mobile and video) along with the emerging Internet of
Things to come up with huge numbers of dollar worth. All this connectedness, says Cisco, will result
in a boost to corporate profits of 21 per cent by 2022, thus ker-chinging $14.4
trillion into the corporate world.
But
how can a ten year projection on as yet vague applications and services be
trusted to mean anything at all? Too
many variables operating across too long a time-span, surely?
It's
all carefully done using a bottom-up methodology, claimed the networking giant.
The presentation given this week itemised where Cisco expects the value to turn
up. According to Fredrick Paul at Read/Write
Enterprise it was broken down thus:
- $2.5 trillion in better asset utilisation
- $2.5 trillion in employee productivity
- $2.7 in supply chain logistics
- $3.7 trillion in better customer experience.
- $3 trillion in enabling new innovations.
In
fact, Cisco's Internet of Everything wraps together all the big IT/networking
trends, such as big data, mobile and cloud as well as the impact of connected
devices