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We're a week away from 2009.... Any predictions about the programming/IT world for the coming year?

New platforms? Toolkits? Trends? or maybe what you'd like to see?

Edit: Duplicate of http://stackoverflow.com/questions/317393/what-are-your-2009-predictions

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I think this should be a community wiki – Gamecat Dec 24 '08 at 10:18
@Gamecat: Agreed – Greg Dec 24 '08 at 11:00
I think this counts as fun. I thought it was fun. – Aaron Maenpaa Dec 24 '08 at 13:13
not a great question, IMO, but I'll just downvote it and move on – Jeff Atwood Dec 24 '08 at 13:15

closed as exact duplicate by George Stocker Dec 28 '08 at 1:17

22 Answers

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More focus on multithreaded programming.

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... or more focus on non-thread concurrency. Scala's actors, Erlang's processes and automatic vectorization just to name a few. – Aaron Maenpaa Dec 24 '08 at 13:10
... and more of Carl Franklin waving his hands about it but not getting it – Aidan Ryan Dec 24 '08 at 15:56
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The economic downturn will cause companies to focus on open-source software in business, to achieve cost-savings. Because of this, significant investment in OSS.

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The question if an OSS solution actually gives any cost-savings is worthy of a flame war of its own. Though there is not initial purchase cost, there is still a lot more to pay for maintenance and traning. – Vilx- Dec 24 '08 at 11:29
Why do you have to pay more for maintenance and training when you use OSS software? – Jules Dec 24 '08 at 11:53
Because, obviously, closed-source software doesn't require maintenance or training. Duh. – Adriano Varoli Piazza Dec 24 '08 at 14:13
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I'd personally like to see Apple launch a larger format iPhone with a screen that was twice the size.... There are rumors of a smaller iPhone "nano" for early next year.

It would really open up the platform to more serious applications. A step toward this would be to add the ability to change the simulator screen size so we can write/test apps that are screen size dynamic, now.

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Wouldn't that be too large to make a convenient phone? An iPalmtop perhaps, but not an iPhone. – RB Dec 24 '08 at 10:30
if you made it half as wide again and half as long again and lost some of the edge it wouldn't be so bad. A mini tablet. Depends what you do with your phone. I use the app part of my phone more than the "mobile" part so it would be good for me. – Tony Lambert Dec 24 '08 at 10:35
I'd like it in a 12" or 15" size; a full tablet. A desk stand and wireless keyboard and mouse for stationary use. – Zan Lynx Jan 17 at 0:19
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  • 2009 will be the year of the Linux desktop (not!)
  • 64 bit operating systems will take off big time
  • Windows 7 will slip into 2010

and on a lighter note:

  • The prophecy of a rival to Jon Skeet domination of Stack Overflow will not be fulfilled!
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my prediction ... "Sean gets off jon skeets nuts" – theman_on_vista Dec 24 '08 at 14:15
... and his nose, ... Permanently brown. – Brad Gilbert Dec 24 '08 at 16:56
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I'd like MS to invest more in the Compact Framework and WinCE. That's all I ever want really....

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Reputation fraud scandals cause global 'karma crunch'.

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Java 7 will see the light. Also Perl 6. On the network side, an increase of IPv6 usage.

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Somehow I doubt that IPv6 thing. It's been around for ages but still hasn't really took off yet.. – Vilx- Dec 24 '08 at 11:30
I've got my home net using IPv6 internally and 6to4 set on my gateway. Can't find an ISP who will provide it direct however. – Zan Lynx Jan 17 at 0:21
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The economic downturn will mean that inadequate (bad) software devs will be let go; the net result being higher quality software being built in 2009!

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This is the most cynical and most optimistic prediction at the same time. I like it :-) – Mendelt Dec 24 '08 at 11:33
Moe likely that the expensive programmers will be let go, and the remaining 'cheap ones' will be producing sub standard software. Or god forbid, dev will be outsourced to India. – Martin Dec 24 '08 at 13:18
Just less of it... – Ali A Dec 24 '08 at 13:22
"Or god forbid, dev will be outsourced to India", Better to get the work done in India rather done by Indians else where :). – FL4SOF Dec 24 '08 at 13:38
wishful thinking – Jason Dec 24 '08 at 13:57
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The antivirus world will start switching over from databases of bad programs, to databases of good programs, because there will be (or already are?) more viruses than there are good prograns. Actually, this has already started, it will just get a lot more prominent.

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StackOverflow will go through the 65535 Questions barrier in early 2009 and crash...

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I think that we will reach this limit at the very end of 2008! 1606 questions to go... – romaintaz Dec 24 '08 at 13:29
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The SETI screen saver discovers alien signals....

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Look at implementing Semantic Web and Microformats in your web applications before you are behind the pack.

It would be interesting to bump this next year at this time and see who the true Nostradamus' are.

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The breakthrough of Scala

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  1. The major negative pressure on open source software will shift from commercial software companies to patent extor^H^H^H^H^Htrolls.

  2. Functional programming will continue to grow (slowly) due to the increased penetration of concurrency and multicore computing.

  3. Economic pressures on IT will have consequences including:

    3.1. Increased attempts to "de-skill" and commoditize programming.

    3.2. Consequently, programmers with at least one other companion skill will be more competitive in the job market.

    3.3. Software quality will be under pressure, due to scheduling and cost factors.

  4. There will continue to be more (and more interesting) languages running on virtual machines (in the bytecode sense), such as the JVM.

  5. There will be more software delivered as installable virtual machines (in the Parallels and VmWare sense) with preconfigured environments.

  6. Due to previous points (2, 4, and 5), physical memory will be the main bottleneck on most systems (rather than CPU clock speed, I/O, network bandwidth, etc.).

  7. The static-vs-dynamic and convention-vs-configuration debates will become increasingly more strident (especially in the US).

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You really think physical memory will be the main bottleneck? Actually, your point #4 makes a problem then CPU clock speed can be a problem. Virtual machines don't make software run faster. As far as #3, that's just PHB fantasy. I agree with #7 but that's about it. – BobbyShaftoe Dec 29 '08 at 3:24
@BobbyShaftoe: I didn't say VMs make software run faster. VMs make an easy way to share a CPU among completely independent processes. Stacking multiple VMs on a single box (where the activity of each VM/appliance isn't CPU bound) will gobble memory quickly. – joel.neely Dec 29 '08 at 5:28
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I feel that the following trends might take the center stage (Not in any specific order).

  1. Cloud computing - Esp with Microsoft Azure, Google Apps Engine
  2. Practical implementation of Green Programming concepts, energy efficient designs etc
  3. Social apps and collaboration tools on top of the Cloud - like Live Mesh
  4. Parallel Programming, High Performance Computing
  5. Online documentation sharing, productivity - More apps like Microsoft Online Office, Google Docs etc
  6. More focus on determining user trends from social apps - like determining a traffic jam from twitter tweets or from google search
  7. Focus on applications that can run on multiple platforms with same code base, through containers like Silverlight, Adobe AIR
  8. Web 3.0, RDF
  9. Location intelligence in applications, mobile devices.
  10. Centralized data storage services
  11. Virtual environments and browser alternatives - like Second Life
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I don't really know what green programming is? I googled and found very little. The only programmers who are concerned with that are doing hardware and perhaps OS design. – BobbyShaftoe Dec 29 '08 at 3:28
I really like #11 but I think that is more in the 2012 and beyond timeframe. – BobbyShaftoe Dec 29 '08 at 3:28
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Alternative languages for the Java Virtual Machine will take off (everyone his/her own language).

Add to that the increased focus on concurrent and functional programming, and I'm sure languages like Clojure will quickly gain popularity.

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I think 2009 will see the rise of GPU programming with CUDA and OpenCL.

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I think this is interesting. I don't know if it will happen. I actually have my doubts but it's interesting. – BobbyShaftoe Dec 29 '08 at 3:29
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Multi-touch hardware and applications.

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The goal of spending less time on SO and getting more actual work done will not be achieved

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Decreased investment in IT will slow the adoption of Windows Vista as well as sales of new software. As such, new(er) technologies (including .NET 3.5) will grow more slowly than expected. Release of .NET 4 will be delayed.

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iPhone sales will drop, as fewer can afford expensive phones and services plans - especially with high unemployment. We'll see significant price drops on 3G plans, as providers try to get some kind of return on their infrastructure investment.

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... and the sky will fall ... – BobbyShaftoe Dec 29 '08 at 3:30
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Jon Skeet's reputation will reach 100 000.

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oh so you are a fan boy ? – theman_on_vista Dec 29 '08 at 20:29

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