Apps To Die ForApps To Die For

Companies developing service-oriented architectures may find the next transformative application

Tony Kontzer, Contributor

December 3, 2004

6 Min Read
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Intuit Inc. is working toward a sort of killer app that borrows from these concepts. Within the next five to 10 years, the company plans to take nearly all the manual labor out of income-tax filing, says Scott Cook, founder and chairman. Future incarnations of the company's popular TurboTax software will use XML Web services to reach into a taxpayer's various financial accounts, pull the data needed to populate portions of a tax return, and combine it with W-2 data stored by the taxpayer's employer. It will then trigger an E-mail from the employer with the employee's completed tax form, requiring that the taxpayer merely click to approve the form before it's sent to the Internal Revenue Service. Intuit already is on the road to making this happen, having established connections into hundreds of financial institutions. "It's a combination of thoroughly connected and intimately personal with guard rails," Cook says.

Even an innovation that might appear specific to a particular business could hold implications for other industries. "It's as much about building capability as it is solving a particular problem," says Bill Godfrey, CIO of Dow Jones Inc. Godfrey's IT crew is building a nimble publishing system based on the Java 2 Enterprise Edition platform. While the system will solve publishing workflow issues, Godfrey says, it also will give Dow Jones the ability to publish variations on a theme. So the same piece of content described in different ways by XML tags could easily be routed to multiple publishing formats, from newsletters and wire services to desktop information products and yet-to-be-thought-of content-distribution methods.

Godfrey characterizes that capability as rethinking how Dow Jones reaches its subscribers. Similar advances could be in the offing for other content-driven industries such as entertainment or professional services. "The companies that can leverage the changes in the supply chain can gain an advantage," he says. "They're future-proofing their businesses."

In Their Own WordsHere's what some of the participants in our online poll flagged as potentially the next killer application

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Secure and auditable E-voting

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24-by-7 mobile connectivity

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Integrated phone, Internet, E-mail, and all other communication in one easy-to-use device

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Spoken natural-language interface in place of mice and keyboards, especially in cell phones and PDAs

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Biometrics instead of passwords

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"Broadquesting" instead of broadcasting, where users get only the information they request

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Smell; companies already are prototyping

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Integrated online news, data, and shopping management

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Total entertainment integration

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Software that learns

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User-centric information management

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Standardized portlets

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A secure, reliable, consistent, and intuitive version of what's being sold now

Data: information online poll of 312 participants

One way Dow Jones is looking to future-proof its business is to work toward taking syndication one step further by delivering its information products in the context of its customers' work, putting the products directly into the applications they work in most frequently. A bond trader would access Dow Jones financial news from within a bond-trading system, rather than having to toggle to a separate desktop application. Engineering such change starts with resources, and Godfrey is looking to reduce the portion of Dow Jones' IT staff that's focused on legacy systems from 50% to 30%. That would translate to 20% more of his staff's time spent on strategic projects rather than caring for legacy technologies.

Part of what makes service-oriented architecture so promising is that it essentially dumbs down application development by enabling every application and data source to speak the same language, such as XML. That means less time spent on custom coding and more time spent solving business problems. It also means the next killer components could come from the unlikeliest of sources. "The barrier to entry for whomever it is that develops the next killer app will be greatly reduced," says Doug Heintzman, director of technical strategy for IBM's software group.

IBM is betting heavily on the future of Web services by undertaking a massive transformation in which its product code base will be deconstructed so that it can deliver functional components rather than packaged middleware apps. About 80% of IBM's code base will be separated into components by the end of 2005, Heintzman says. He expects that eventually, IBM will have lots of company as Web services continue their migration from the middleware layer to the application layer. "We're going to see the same market forces that are driving us to do that showing up in other places," he says, especially as core business systems such as enterprise resource planning, customer-relationship management, and supply-chain management increasingly are broken down into assortments of components.

Return to The Future Of Software homepageIn the past, predicting a killer app was difficult, but building one was even harder. As the ability to build apps on the fly grows, trying to predict which ones will be transformative won't be easy. But whatever components emerge as the killer apps of the future, their arrival will be signaled by the same indicator: They'll alter the way business is conducted.

Continue to the sidebar: You Tell Us--What's The Next Killer App?

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