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Michael Starnes

Wearable Tech Will Create BYOD Tsunami

Written by Michael Starnes
2/12/2013 34 comments
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The next big shift in IT's cycle will come strapped to our wrists.

We are already migrating into a landscape of people who are empowered with information-gathering and reporting devices. These portable devices, in order to be truly effective, require interaction with the cloud or the Internet. But today, these devices rely heavily on tethering, a trend that will not last given our insatiable demand for mobility and flexibility. Users, from top executives to students, will increasingly insist upon WiFi connectivity.

DIck Tracy Calling
Chester Gould set the bar high when he drew Dick Tracy and his high-tech wristwatch. (Source: Wikipedia)
Chester Gould set the bar high when he drew Dick Tracy and his high-tech wristwatch.
(Source: Wikipedia)

The vision of the future, as drawn by Chester Gould, included wearable tech not far beyond our current technological reach. Yes, we have the components necessary to make a Dick Tracy watch. For connoisseurs of the 1940’s comic strip, this is an exciting prospect.

Police Detective Dick Tracy, as drawn in the popular comic, sported a highly functional tool -- his watch. This device, which looked very similar to any other watch, featured capabilities far beyond the technology of the day, including videoconferencing, big-data search, and navigational guidance. In fact, it had components that exist, in larger form factors, in today's tech world.

Rumors that Apple will be releasing a device akin to the Dick Tracy Watch are surfacing across the web, although Apple has not confirmed these stories.

Apple stores stock bands for its popular Nano iPod, which many users sport similarly to a wristwatch. Fossil released the Abacus AU5005, a wrist PDA running Palm OS, but it never gained any market traction. First released in 2004, it's possible Fossil could rerelease Abacus with the recent advent of BlackBerry 10. (See: BlackBerry 10 Faces Enterprise, BYOD Hurdles.)

Almost three years ago, another big tech player cited the comic strip in a widely reported blog post. Carl Taussig, director of IS at HP Labs in Palo Alto, referred to a watch in development in a one-line description: “We call it a Dick Tracy Watch." Since he posted this in May 2010, the HP product cannot be far off.

Handy, Dandy Device
People can customize Pebble's watch face, apps, and other features, according to the developer.
(Source: Pebble)
People can customize Pebble's watch face, apps, and other features, according to the developer.
(Source: Pebble)

There are smart wristwatch options out there, if you want one sooner than later. For example, Pebble Watch expects to ship its customizable, wearable tech, which lists for $150, next quarter (it's taking pre-orders now). Born from a KickStarter campaign, this small manufacturer didn't wait for the big boys to get to market, and tried to carve its own niche early.

Sony, which is a big company, has the SmartWatch, which lets wearers access text messages, emails, and status updates, as well as apps on Google Play.

One reason these intelligent, connected wristwatches will succeed is our evolving connectivity.

MediaTek, an off-brand smartphone manufacturer, is mounting a plan to release a no contract, $100-range smartphone. In fact, I've seen some reports that the smartphone market will settle into a $50, no-contract price.

Smartphones and other mobile devices built on an operating system with advanced connectivity options are becoming the norm, not the exception. Phones that look for WiFi, rather than defaulting to 3G/4G connectivity, are storming the market. As the saturation percentage increases, and as devices ship at a lower price point, business environments of all sizes will be challenged with wireless informal device support, also known as BYOD.

Corporate offices, traditionally protected by a hard firewall-based network edge, are being forced to recognize this micro army of devices. Incorporating the ad hoc user via tethered Bluetooth device or 802.x enabled WiFi is IT's reality. As I wrote recently, there are tools out there used solely to compromise networks via WiFi radio, tools that are accessible and free.

Understanding the impact of these devices in relation to governance, security, and accessibility requires a current look at adoptable and available technology.

Too often, when I broach this topic with clients, they greet me with understanding nods and placating statements. They get that "this is the future." Acknowledging that the future is here is rare. A real threat exists, not tomorrow, but today.

In nature, a tsunami builds far off the coast, spurred by an underwater shift in the landscape, far below the visible surface. On the horizon, you can't see any real change. Only after the massive wave has had time to build and gain momentum does the destructive force strike a coastline. Plummeting hardware costs, market innovators, user demand, and established standards constitute the digital plate shift -- and these events have already happened in our industry.

The tsunami of BYOD, in the form of inexpensive wearable tech, is about to hit the coastline of IT. Can your department swim?

— Michael Starnes is CEO of Orlando-based Starnes Consulting.

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shakeeb
IQ Crew
Sunday February 17, 2013 12:01:00 AM
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@Joe – even now we say "Talk to my hand" literally, now it would be practically talk to the hand. Lol

 

shakeeb
IQ Crew
Saturday February 16, 2013 11:55:33 PM
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@Shehan – I am not sure if that will solve the problem, as IP addresses could be assigned to each device. However your method could certainly reduce the traffic and solve the problem to an extent.

Joe Stanganelli
Thinkernetter
Saturday February 16, 2013 11:19:02 PM
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That's really neat, hounhosp; gives a whole new depth of meaning to the phrase "Talk to the hand!"

shehan
IQ Crew
Saturday February 16, 2013 5:21:18 AM
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@hounhosp - yes a proper network management is require to avoid such a situation, the best way I see is to only allow specific IPs to access the network.

shehan
IQ Crew
Saturday February 16, 2013 5:19:03 AM
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@Alison - That's a good one "I don't know--can you imagine a room full of people talking to their wrists?" 

A smart watch has both hands free mode (Bluetooth) and speaker phone mode. I would be awkward when people talk to their wrist as you said. 

shehan
IQ Crew
Saturday February 16, 2013 5:15:55 AM
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@mharden - Smart watches too have the capability of connecting to the network via WLAN. As you said all these smartphones and other devices have brought risk to the business.

shehan
IQ Crew
Saturday February 16, 2013 5:14:08 AM
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@Michael - yes its the organizations responsibility to set up authentication methods to accept a device to a network. But what if I am authorized to use my laptop with the network, and now I also have a tablet. In that case I would have authentication codes for the network. 

Alison Diana
Thinkernetter
Friday February 15, 2013 5:07:27 PM
no ratings

That's wild! There's a side benefit for those of us who occasionally talk to ourselves: With all these devices, now everyone thinks we're muttering into our Bluetooths -- or soon, that we're chattering into our smartwatches or, yes, even gloves. Gotta love it. 

hounhosp
Thinkernetter
Friday February 15, 2013 3:39:48 PM
no ratings

@Michael,

I agree, with the adequate autentication strategy, the tsunami may not happen at all. Most companies are usually equipped with network management tools that make network access control much easier to handle.

hounhosp
Thinkernetter
Friday February 15, 2013 3:28:09 PM
no ratings

@Alison,

"can you imagine a room full of people talking to their wrists?"

Maybe that will eventually become the "new normal". Can you imagime people talking to their "gloves"? Not some time ago. But today it can happen.

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