IT Industry Survived 2012, but Don't Expect an Innovation Boom in 2013
NEWS ANALYSIS: Looking back, the year 2012 wasn’t as bad for the IT industry as it seemed it would be. The predicted Mayan Apocalypse proved to be a chimera for corporate IT as for the rest of the world. But what might be lying in wait for 2013?
But there will be some things coming in 2013 that actually are improvements. They just won’t happen in areas where the Deep Thinkers can make comparisons to the iPhone or other Apple products. The most important change that nobody cares about (except when they’re in trouble) is the growth of text-to-911 along with the ability to send photos and videos to 911 call centers. Depending on how 2013 goes this new capability could save dozens to hundreds of lives. You’ll also finally see three of the major carriers roll out 4G LTE service to substantially all of the U.S. by the end of 2013. Sprint will be on the way, but by the end of the year the new Softbank subsidiary will struggling with its Clearwire acquisition and the need to deal with its struggling WiMax infrastructure. T-Mobile, meanwhile, will roll out LTE as soon as it closes its purchase of MetroPCS. Some of T-Mobile’s new LTE infrastructure will come with the MetroPCS deal. The rest of it will take advantage of new infrastructure that T-Mobile has already installed in preparation. The company’s new combo antenna and transmitter design will allow deployment to take place almost instantly. T-Mobile and then Sprint may also begin what will become a long fall from grace for carrier subsidized mobile devices. Once customers start to notice that everything costs less when you don’t have a subsidy, Verizon Wireless and AT&T will have to start offering devices that way as well. But it will be a long slow fall. There are plenty of people who feel that subsidized phones are actually cheaper, even if they’re not.






















