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The Services & Software market – what do we mean?

Session 3 Service & Software Architectures: State-of-the-art and IST Call 1 Objectives Skopje, 15 December 2006. The Services & Software market – what do we mean?. SOFTWARE. SERVICES. Application Software. IT Support Services. IT Consulting. IT Implementation.

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The Services & Software market – what do we mean?

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  1. Session 3 Service & Software Architectures: State-of-the-art and IST Call 1 ObjectivesSkopje, 15 December 2006

  2. The Services & Software market – what do we mean? SOFTWARE SERVICES Application Software IT Support Services IT Consulting IT Implementation System Software Operations management Source: EITO

  3. The Services & Software (S&S) market – key facts • Services & Software is a key industrial sector within the ICT market • 1 Million specialists in EU • 200 B€market • EU ICT market growth mainly driven by software and IT services • The engine room of the Information Society • Important EU industry sectors depend on Software &Services • 70% of software development takes place in non-software companies • But, Europe faces strong international competition (the Top 4 software vendors in the European market are US companies)

  4. 12,6 8,8 7,8 4,5 4,4 2,6 2,4 1,3 1,0 0,9 0,6 35,1 24,1 18,8 11,5 8,6 7,2 5,6 2,7 2,0 1,8 1,0 Structure of Services and Software market • Services represent 72% of the market, while Software 28% • #1 in Software: Germany ; #1 in Services: United Kingdom Software (Market volume 2005e) Software 46,9 (28,4%) 2 3 Germa - UK France Nordic Italy Spain Nether - Austria Bel - Other Por - ny lands gium tugal 118,1 IT services (Market volume 2005e) (71,6%) IT services Data missing – only EU15 available 1 2 - - Source: 1 PAC EU15 SITS 2005e in bn EUR 3 2 3 UK Germa - France Nordic Italy Nether - Spain Bel - Others Aus - Por - Market volume: 165.0 bn EUR - ny lands gium tria tugal

  5. Services & Software in the overall ICT market • Software has a 10.8% share and IT Services a 20.3% share of the total European ICT market (EU 25) Source: http://www.softwareleadership.info/

  6. Key trends in Services and Software market • From Products to Services • eServices • Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) • Software as a service • Collaborative development of software and distribution • ICT infrastructures need for more flexibility and reduction of TCO (Total Cost of Ownership) • Our societies and economies depend more and more on software • Growing requirements for reliability, security and dependability • Laws, regulations • Habits and culture

  7. Technological trends in Services & Software market According to a study by CapGemini in 2006, the key trends are: • Internet technologies • IP (Internet Protocol) - based software and systems are gaining importance • Digital convergence • Telecommunication, Information- and Internet technologies are integrating • Multimedia services are gaining importance • Mobile Services • Increased offering of messaging, information, and mobile office solutions • More customer specific solutions • Intelligent Software-Agents • Agents are integrating smaller scale household applications, resulting in an increasing demand for integrating software and local systems solutions • Further developments – e.g. RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) Source: CapGemini, 2006, http://www.softwareleadership.info/

  8. Landscape of FP6 projects in Services & Software

  9. State-of-art in services & software research State-of-art is based on the analysis of 44 FP6 projects. Key research areas are: • Research on engineering and provision of services and software. Examples: • ambient intelligence services for networked home environments (AMIGO project) • Adaptive services discrovery, creation and enactment (ASG project) • Mobile applications and services (MIDAS project) • Foundational research on high-level methods for system design, testing, collaborative, distributive and end-user development. Examples: • Large-scale deployment of model-driven deployment ( MODELWARE project) • Software Product Line development methodology offering modularisation of variations (AMPLE project) • Framework for Generic Configuration Management Framework (COMANCHE project)

  10. State-of-art in services & software research • Methods and tools for design of complex software systems. Examples: • Solution for complex system engineering improving quality and productivity (MODELPLEX project) • Development of self-healing software system (SHADOW project) • Research on the development and deployment of open source software. Examples: • Open-source software development framework (MUSIC project) • Method for benchmarking the quality of open source software (QUALOSS project)

  11. FP6 project case study: AMIGO • AMIGO: Ambient Intelligence for the networked home environment • Objectives: • to research and develop open, standardized, interoperable middleware and intelligent user services for thenetworked home environment, • which offers users intuitive, personalized and unobtrusive interaction by providing seamless interoperability of services and applications. • Instrument: Integrated Project • Project website: http://www.hitech-projects.com/euprojects/amigo/

  12. FP6 project case study: MIDAS • MIDAS: Middleware Platform for Developing and Deploying Advanced Mobile Services • Objectives: • MIDAS will define and implement a platform to simplify and speed up the task of developing and deploying mobile applications and services. • It focuses in particular on making it feasible to provide mobile services where: (1) The number of users is very large (e.g. large sports events); (2) The network may need to be set up at short notice, or for limited duration; (3) Infrastructure is limited and some users may have to use ad-hoc communications. • Instrument: Specific Targeted Research Project • Project website: http://www.ist-midas.org/

  13. FP6 project case study: TEAM • TEAM: Tightening knowledge sharing in distributed software communities by applying semantic technologies • Objectives: • The TEAM project addresses the need for a knowledge sharing environment with advanced capabilities suitable for the distributed engineering and management of software systems. • The TEAM project aims to develop an open-source software system, seamlessly integrated in a software development environment for enabling decentralised, personalised and context-aware knowledge sharing. • Instrument: Specific Targeted Research Project • Project website: http://www.team-project.eu/

  14. Networked European Software and Services Initiative - NESSI • NESSI is the European Technology Platformon Software and Services • Coordinated by 21 partners coming from ICT industry and academia. • NESSI is coordinated by industry and academia and Members are: • Currently has over 120 members. Membership is free and open to all interested organisations • NESSI aims to provide a unified view for European research in Services Architectures and Software Infrastructures • By uniting all stakeholders through active contributions and involvements in the elaboration of its Strategic Research Agenda • There are 9 Working Groups within NESSI, such as: • Services Engineering • Services Science • Service Oriented Infrastructures • Software Engineering

  15. Component based SW Engineering Architectures PC-based resources R&D evolution in Software & Services Service Architecture Complexity and dynamic composition Service infrastructure Services Complexity Open-development Grids FP7 FP5 FP6

  16. From market & technological trends to RTD challenges and objectives Seventh Framework Programme 2007-2013 (FP7) COOPERATION Programme IDEAS Programme PEOPLE Programme CAPACITIES Programme ICT Work Programme 2007-2008 (Draft) Challenge 1 “Pervasive and Trusted Network and Service Infrastructures” 1st Call – 24 April 2007 Objective 1.2 “Service and Software Architectures, Infrastructures and Engineering”

  17. Objective 1.2 “Service and Software Architectures, Infrastructures and Engineering” – 1st Call details • Objective 1.2 is targeted in the 1st Call of ICT • to be announced ~ 22 /12/2006, • with deadline for submission of proposals ~ 24/4/2007 • Opportunities for Western Balkan countries: all types of organisations (Research, SMEs, Public Administrations) can participate as partners with EC funding

  18. Obj. 1.2: Target Outcomes & Impact @ a glance Target outcomes • Service Architectures • Service/Software Engineering • Mastery of Complexity and dependability • Virtualisation tools, middleware and network-centric operating systems Expected Impact • Dynamic Services and networked applications • Efficiency, productivity, reliability in Services and Software • New opportunities, especially for SMEs, through open and standard platforms

  19. Obj. 1.2: Target Outcomes (1/4) • Service Architectures, Platforms, Technologies, Methods and Tools: • that enable context awareness and discovery, advertising, personalisation and dynamic composition of services. • They should support flexible business models, provide for service management, and guarantee end-to-end quality of service. Target outcomes • Service Architectures • Service/Software Engineering • Mastery of Complexity and dependability • Virtualisation tools, middleware and network-centric operating systems

  20. Obj. 1.2: Target Outcomes (2/4) • Service/software engineering approaches, development processes, product lifecycle and tools for: • dynamically composed systems with dependable quality of service and reliability properties, and • promoting new open development paradigms with a higher degree of involvement of joint user and development communities. Target outcomes • Service Architectures • Service/Software Engineering • Mastery of Complexity and dependability • Virtualisation tools, middleware and network-centric operating systems

  21. Obj. 1.2: Target Outcomes (3/4) • Strategies and technologies enabling mastery of complexity, dependability, and behavioural stability: • in complex systems and in systems evolving over time without central design • Appropriate mechanisms should guarantee end-to-end quality of service. Target outcomes • Service Architectures • Service/Software Engineering • Mastery of Complexity and dependability • Virtualisation tools, middleware and network-centric operating systems

  22. Obj. 1.2: Target Outcomes (4/4) • Virtualisation tools, system software, middleware and network-centric operating systems, including Grid-based systems: • that orchestrate unlimited, heterogeneous and dynamic resources distributed across multiple platforms as a single entity, • and provide platform-independent access and sharing of knowledge, processing, communication, storage and content. Target outcomes • Service Architectures • Service/Software Engineering • Mastery of Complexity and dependability • Virtualisation tools, middleware and network-centric operating systems

  23. Further sources of information & useful contacts • Unit of Software Technologies (European Commission) http://cordis.europa.eu/ist/st/index.html • NESSI http://www.nessi-europe.eu/Nessi/ • IST 2006 Conference – proceedings of parallel session on Service and Software Architectures, Infrastructures and Engineering http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/istevent/2006/cf/conference-detail.cfm?id=1060 • For a list of projects in the field of software technologies visit: http://cordis.europa.eu/ist/st/projects.htm • Reports on service engineering: http://cordis.europa.eu/ist/st/reports.htm • Studies on services & software: http://cordis.europa.eu/ist/st/studies.htm

  24. Thank you for your attention Raphael Koumeri PLANET S.A. planet@skypro.be

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