For Application Development & Program Management Professionals (Length: 22 pages)
This document includes Business Data

August 1, 2008

The Mobile Architecture Imperative

Architect For Thin And Thick Mobile Clients For The Next Five Years

by Jeffrey S. Hammond, Ellen Daley

with Gene Leganza, Benjamin Gray, Heidi Lo


Executive Summary (This is a document excerpt)

The past eight years have shown little business adoption of mobile applications beyond wireless email and a few key applications. As a result, firms have been able to limp along without comprehensive mobile architectures. No longer. Today, the imperative for defining a holistic mobile architecture is red hot. As IT reacts to a chaotic increase in device types, wireless networks, and demand for mobile apps, firms report that providing more mobility support to information workers, task workers, and now customers ranks at the top of their 2008 priorities. Enterprise architecture professionals must assess which applications these mobile users want and the attributes of that use — the devices, networks, and security — as well as define an architecture that can support development, management, and security. In the end, two major architectures — thin client and thick client — will evolve, and a comprehensive mobile architecture strategy will need to include both options.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

NOTES & RESOURCES

itemMobility Has Been On A Perennial Slow Burn

itemTwo Mobile Architectures Emerge For Today And Tomorrow

itemThin Mobile Architectures Allow Apps To Reach A Host Of Consumer Devices

itemThick Mobile Architectures Bring Full Firm Capabilities Anywhere

itemDeveloping Your Mobile Architecture Strategy

recommendations

itemDefine Your User's Needs, Then Plan Tactics And Strategy

WHAT IT MEANS

itemImproved Capability Will Push Mobile Devices Over The Top

itemSupplemental Material

Forrester interviewed 15 vendor and user companies, including Antenna Software, Avaya, Compuware, Delta Air Lines, Dexterra, Electronic Data Systems (EDS), Exxon Mobil, Gearworks, General Motors, Progress Energy, Research In Motion (RIM), Safeway, Sybase, and Vettro.

Related Research Documents

itemInquiry Insights: Enterprise Mobility, Q1 2008

March 4, 2008

itemForrester TechRadar™: Enterprise-Class Mobile Devices And Management Solutions, Q1 2008

January 31, 2008

itemThe Mobile Web Versus The Web On An iPhone: iPhone Wins In A Blowout

July 31, 2007

Find Documents In Related Categories

This document falls under the following categories. Click on a link below to find similar documents.

Analyst: Ellen Daley, Jeffrey S. Hammond
Technology: Application Development, Architecture & Technology Strategy, Enterprise Architecture, Enterprise Architecture Domains, Enterprise Mobility, Mobile Application Development
Geography: Europe, North America

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Ratings and Comments
Rating: 9 out of 10
based on 3 ratings across all roles.
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