As 2013 comes to a close it’s worth highlighting what ZDNet’s Editorial Board saw as the year’s biggest stories and why.
What follows is our take on the big stories, which could be both
global and local in flavor, and the takeaways for the tech sector around
the world.
Larry Dignan: Snowden, NSA and the hit to cloud credibility
Edward Snowden was an American computer specialist who came clean on
how the U.S. government was tapping into the Internet as well as the
services of Microsoft, Google, Yahoo and others to track people. In the
U.S., the Snowden disclosures were mixed with either outrage of folks
who thought surveillance was necessary and far from surprising. The
larger issue in the business tech space is whether emerging markets and
international companies will go for U.S. tech giants, which derive half
of their revenue on average outside of the U.S. Snowden's disclosures
also highlighted a few cracks in the ability of the cloud to keep your
data secure. I'd argue we're only beginning to see the Snowden fallout
in tech earnings.
Steve Ranger: London's start-up culture gains confidence
It's been too long since a genuine tech giant was grown in the UK:
indeed for a long time many said the environment (both cultural and
economic) was so hostile to tech businesses that it would never happen
again. And yet, in the last few years a tech start-up ecosystem has been
gradually emerging in Shoreditch to the north east of the city,
simultaneously revitalising a decaying and grimy neighbourhood and
giving the UK the best shot at delivering a tech giant that it has had
for decades. It's still early of course and many of these companies will
fail – but not all. The emergence of a particularly British (and
London) entrepreneurial tech scene is an exciting development.
Chris Duckett: In Australia, politics and tech collide
For Australia, the biggest event was a change in government and the
impact that the voter’s decision will have on the tech sector for
decades. Switching from a government steeped in a love of nationalised
infrastructure to one punch-drunk on austerity has thrown everything
surrounding the NBN up in the air. Over the coming years we will see
whether Malcolm Turnbull’s rollout of fibre to roadside cabinets is
prudent, or whether it will be the decision that turned a mostly uniform
fibre-to-the-premise network into a frankensteinian mish-mash of five
different technologies.
Jo Best: Nokia unwinds
This year saw the saga of Nokia finally come to end. Since the start
of the decade, speculation had run rife about the future direction of
Nokia's handset division - and indeed, whether it had one at all. Would
it go Android? Would it get spun off? Would it even survive at all? In
the end, it turned out it was pursuing a union with Microsoft - a result
that many people expected when Stephen Elop, a former Microsoft man,
was appointed to the role of Nokia CEO in 2010. As of early next year,
the Nokia brand name will gradually start fading from mobile handsets
across the world, taking with it one of the continent's best known tech
brands.
Jason Hiner: Android ascends, PCs run out of gas
Two related trends that criss-crossed in 2013 were the Android
ecosystem getting its act together and becoming the dominant force in
computing, while the PC ecosystem hastened its decline by failing to
inspire users with hybrid Windows 8 systems.
Android had a huge 2013. Google refined Android's industry-leading
notifications system so that it's even more useful for alerts and
at-a-glance information, Google Now (paired with Android notifications)
gave Android a killer feature that trumps iOS and shows us the future of
contextual computing, and a parade of great devices from the Galaxy S4
to the Moto X to the Nexus 5 made iPhone hardware envy a thing of the
past. In Q3, Android was on over 80% of the 211 million smartphones
shipped.
A year ago, the PC market contracted for the first time in its
history, dropping 1.2%. In 2013, the decline accelerated big time as the
PC market contracted by 10%. It is projected to continue its decline in
the years ahead, as more and more people spend more of their time on
mobile devices rather than second PCs and many consumers and non-desk
workers simply opt for mobile devices instead of PCs.
The big question for 2014: Could we see Android cross-over into the
PC market despite Google's Chromebook fetish? Would it make a
difference?
Eileen Yu: Increased online monitoring across Asia
2013 saw governments across Asia including China, India,
and Singapore intensify controls within their respective online
community. Beijing passed a new directive to clamp down on offenders who
spread false information online and promptly made a slew of arrests, rounding up several high-profile bloggers for reposting unsubstantiated claims. Singapore also introduced a rule
requiring websites that reported on local news--and that met two main
criteria on audience reach and news frequency--to apply for a license to
operate. The news sent the local online community reeling in anger and
sparked much discussion about what the new ruling would mean for online
freedom of expression in Singapore. The Indian government also
intensified its controls by setting up a social media monitoring facility as well a central monitoring system to tap landline and mobile communications.
I expect legislations and government plans for online surveillance to continue in 2014, thanks in large to the Snowden revelations, giving Asian governments more reasons to intensify their security controls and monitoring.
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