address

  • (computer science) the code that identifies where a piece of information is stored
  • the place where a person or organization can be found or communicated with
  • The particulars of the place where someone lives or an organization is situated
  • The place itself
  • A binary number that identifies a particular location in a data storage system or computer memory
  • speak to; “He addressed the crowd outside the window”

    mobile

  • Able to move or be moved freely or easily
  • (of a store, library, or other service) Accommodated in a vehicle so as to travel around and serve various places
  • moving or capable of moving readily (especially from place to place); “a mobile missile system”; “the tongue isthe most mobile articulator”
  • (of the face or its features) Indicating feelings with fluid and expressive movements
  • migratory; “a restless mobile society”; “the nomadic habits of the Bedouins”; “believed the profession of a peregrine typist would have a happy future”; “wandering tribes”
  • a river in southwestern Alabama; flows into Mobile Bay

    number

  • An arithmetical value, expressed by a word, symbol, or figure, representing a particular quantity and used in counting and making calculations and for showing order in a series or for identification
  • Arithmetic
  • A quantity or amount
  • the property possessed by a sum or total or indefinite quantity of units or individuals; “he had a number of chores to do”; “the number of parameters is small”; “the figure was about a thousand”
  • total: add up in number or quantity; “The bills amounted to $2,000”; “The bill came to $2,000”
  • a concept of quantity involving zero and units; “every number has a unique position in the sequence”

    track

  • A prepared course or circuit for athletes, horses, motor vehicles, bicycles, or dogs to race on
  • carry on the feet and deposit; “track mud into the house”
  • path: a line or route along which something travels or moves; “the hurricane demolished houses in its path”; “the track of an animal”; “the course of the river”
  • The sport of running on such a track
  • A rough path or minor road, typically one beaten by use rather than constructed
  • observe or plot the moving path of something; “track a missile”

track mobile number with address

"Top 10 Emerging Technology Trends for 2011"

"Top 10 Emerging Technology Trends for 2011"
Like most years, 2011 aims to start off with great promise when it comes to
emerging IT technologies in the enterprise. There will no doubt be some
major advances in terms of cloud computing and smarter mobile computing
devices, and *great leaps forward in the area of IT
automation*
.

But 2011 is most likely to be remembered as a year in which IT organizations
rediscover the need to concentrate on fundamental data management issues. If
you take a close look at all the major issues that challenge IT
organizations today, whether it is cloud computing, storage, security or
compliance, they all point back to data management.

The simple and sad truth is that when it comes to managing data, most IT
organizations have not done a very good job of it over the last several
decades. The end result is that IT organizations randomly copy data all over
the organization, resulting in a waste of IT infrastructure and all kinds of
related potential security issues.

Now with *the rise of cloud
computing*,
IT organizations are being asked to account for how they manage data.
Business leaders want to take advantage of the economic benefits of cloud
computing that are made possible by sharing IT infrastructure. The only
problem is that not only do most IT organizations not have the data
management tools they need to manage that process securely, they don’t even
know what data has the most business value to the organization. It’s
impossible to have an effective data management strategy when your IT
organization treats all data as if it has equal value.

The good news is that *2011 will bring a new class of tools that should
automate data management*.
Imagine being able to ascribe a business value to classes of data so a
policy engine could then automatically determine where best to store that
data based on its processing requirements and sensitivity. Imagine duplicate
sets of data automatically being erased by a central management system that
keeps track of the relationship between sets of data across the entire
enterprise. And because IT organizations are now effectively managing data,
imagine that most compliance and security issues are effectively resolved as
a byproduct of that effort.

Such a day is not very far off. In fact, many of the technologies needed to
implement a policy-based data management strategy are already available.
What’s missing in most IT organizations is the internal fortitude to put in
place a real data management system, so, as a result, the data winds up
managing the IT department versus the other way around.

During the course of 2011 we will hear a lot about the potential value of
any number of emerging enterprise technologies. But it’s becoming real clear
that unless IT organizations concentrate on the fundamentals of data
management, none of these technologies will make a substantial difference in
the final IT equation.

In fact, IT vendors will start to sound a lot like automobile manufacturers
touting the efficiencies of their cars after encouraging customers to guzzle
as much gas as possible for the better part of three decades. But instead of
cars, the subject of the efficiency campaign is going to be IT
infrastructure.

There are, of course, other critical emerging technologies in 2011,
including *unified
communications*
, *HTML5*
, *intelligent Layer 2
switching*
, *unified storage* ,
*business process management*

and *data analytics*.
But none of them will make as much impact on the way IT is managed as
next-generation data management tools.

In the meantime, IT organizations should be working on getting their IT
houses in order to take advantage of all these emerging technologies. The
coming year will see a lot of advancement in terms of addressing practical
IT issues, but no one will really benefit from them without first
concentrating on the fundamentals of IT.

Tracks

Tracks
Tracks. Ljubljana, Slovenia.