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Last week, we had the fortune to meet Harry Blount, SVP and analyst at Lehman
Brothers who covers a broad range of IT companies. We met at Nokia headquarters
in Helsinki where our investor Nokia Innovent had its annual portfolio day
with lots of Nokia execs in attendance.
Harry has this concept of "liquid data" data, which he defines as
follows:
What is Liquid Data?
The ability of data to instantaneously and securely flow from where it is
stored to where it is used regardless of the underlying hardware, network,
or software.
CURRENT SITUATION:
- Islands of data in both enterprise and home
- Data viscosity due to:
- Lack of connectivity/accessibility
- I/O compatibility
- Data format agreement
- Security and access
It's a great analogy. It conveys quite well what the problem is. We probably would
have called it Liquid Information rather than Liquid Data, but the end result is
about the same. One of the overarching, "mega-trend" challenges we face
in the IT industry is to make information more liquid, and thus more used and more
useful.
Of course, NetMesh InfoGrid is a great technology that helps us move in that
direction. In fact, one could argue that making legacy data more liquid is
its essential function: making it integrated, real-time, uniform,
event-integrated and usable from many different devices and user interface
paradigms.
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