Gartner Announces Cool Vendors in Emerging Trends and Technologies for 2005
Analysts Highlight Small Companies Developing Innovative Products for Managing Technology
STAMFORD, Conn., May 2, 2005 As companies try to deal with the increasing complexity of technology, Gartner, Inc. has highlighted seven technology providers it calls "Cool Vendors" that are developing emerging technologies to address these challenges.
Anne-Marie Roussel, research vice president and "Cool Vendors" lead Gartner analyst, defines these technology providers as "small companies that offer technologies or products with three key characteristics: innovative they must enable users to do things they couldn't do before; impactful they have or will have business impact; and, intriguing they have caught Gartner's interest or curiosity in approximately the past six months."
In the Gartner report "Cool Vendors in Emerging Trends and Technologies, 2005," Gartner analysts identify three vendors that have developed sensor and location technologies, while others have built systems for debugging software and products for the life sciences market.
Gartner analysts said XenSource, a new software company formed to promote the Xen hypervisor, is possibly Microsoft's greatest challenge. The hypervisor is a thin layer of software that runs at the hardware level of a system. This thin layer of open source software allows for operating systems to run on top of it, thus fully emulating the system platform and thereby allowing multiple operating environments to run in parallel on a single system.
"XenSource's technology threatens to loosen Microsoft's grip on the PC market, and open up the PC for non-MS software that runs in conjunction with Windows," said Martin Reynolds, group vice president and Gartner Fellow. "It's like an operating system for operating systems, and it can run multiple environments simultaneously."
Hypervisors provide the necessary security and partitioning to run multiple operating environments in parallel on a single system. "Hypervisors will pervade all computing environments during the next five years, improving security, flexibility, and manageability," Mr. Reynolds said. "Hypervisors are critical to reducing hardware management costs, drawing maximum value from IT investments and building massively scalable systems.
Exavera Technologies, Dust Networks and Impinji have technologies important to the development of sensor networks and location technologies. "Sensor networks will drive the number of network-connected devices up by one or two orders of magnitude during the next decade," Mr. Reynolds said. "The companies are all developing intellectual property and market segments that will naturally draw them to location-aware networks."
ZealCore is a company that has tools that can assist in debugging complex software environments. These tools are important when implementing service-oriented architectures. Gartner analysts said these new architectures will be needed to deal with the data provided by sensor networks.
Teranode is a company that applies design automation to life sciences. Its technology allows scientists to better understand biochemical reactions. "Life sciences will continue to represent an IT frontier for many years to come, and controlling the costs of teasing knowledge from complex systems will be a critical factor in advancing IT in life sciences," said Carol Rozwell, vice president and research director at Gartner.
Clairvoyante has innovative display technologies that can deliver more visual information at lower costs, improving the ways in which people interact with computers. The company has developed enhanced technologies for liquid crystal displays (LCDs) that allow LCDs to use fewer pixel cells to deliver identical visual resolutions. These LCD panels will become more power-efficient and cost less to make. The high-resolution displays could one day allow users to use electronic displays more efficiently than paper hard copy.
About Gartner's Cool Vendors Research
Gartner has identified more than 100 "cool vendors" as small companies that just may produce the next "big thing" in IT. Gartner has included companies that have not yet received much attention or publicity due to their size. There are cool vendor reports for segments such as customer relationship management, outsourcing, mobile and wireless, security and privacy, and Web services. A full listing of the reports is available on Gartner's Web site at www.gartner.com/research/spotlight/asset_125000_895.jsp.
About Gartner:
Gartner, Inc. is the leading provider of research and analysis on the global information technology industry. Gartner serves more than 10,000 clients, including chief information officers and other senior IT executives in corporations and government agencies, as well as technology companies and the investment community. The Company focuses on delivering objective, in-depth analysis and actionable advice to enable clients to make more informed business and technology decisions. The Company's businesses consist of Research and Events for IT professionals; Gartner Executive Programs, membership programs and peer networking services; and Gartner Consulting, customized engagements with a specific emphasis on outsourcing and IT management. Founded in 1979, Gartner is headquartered in Stamford, Connecticut, and has over 3,900 associates, including more than 1,100 research analysts and consultants, in more than 75 locations worldwide. For more information,
visit www.gartner.com.