Business applications will increasingly head into the cloud as consumer technology filters through to business, according to U.K. CIOs.
More than half (56 percent) of the CIOs surveyed believe all applications used by their organization will be hosted on the Internet within five years, while 76 percent of the CIOs questioned think the increased availability of Wi-Fi and broadband at home is encouraging people to look at using online applications.
The research, commissioned by salesforce.com, found 83 percent of CIOs feel tech from the likes of Google and Facebook are shaping the technologies that businesses are adopting.
Google and Microsoft have been leading the push to the cloud, with popular online collaboration services in the shape of Google Apps and Office Live Workspace, while the likes of salesforce.com and its rivals have long been touting software as service for applications such as CRM.
Speaking to ZDNet Asia's sister site silicon.com, senior analyst with Freeform Dynamics, David Tebbutt, said while the progression to more cloud-hosted applications is inevitable, the CIOs' timings may be ambitious. "I think [the surveyed CIOs are] wrong on timescale. I think a lot of work will migrate to the cloud in that timescale but I think a lot more will migrate later on. I think we're talking about fairly long timescales."
Others remain unconvinced the cloud is ready for business. Citrix CTO and chair, Martin Duursma said recently cloud-based applications--or software-as-a-service--remain "several years away" from being enterprise ready.
He added companies should not rush into putting mission critical apps into the cloud until the services have become more reliable.
Freeform Dynamics' Tebbutt said companies need to work out which applications they feel comfortable with putting into the cloud and who they want to host services.
"It's about trust isn't it really? That's what it boils down to," he said. "I do think that a lot of work will go out to the cloud. It really depends on the nature of the business."
The research was carried out by Coleman Parkes and quizzed CIOs from 100 U.K. organisations.
Tim Ferguson of Silicon.com reported from London.













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