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        IDC Predicts Higher Worldwide Cloud Services Spending Trend
        
        
        
        
		A newly released forecast  by IDC projects that IT spending in the public cloud sector will have a compounded annual growth rate of 27.6 percent over the next four  years, raising the total global spending in the market to $72.9 Billion by 2015.
The global market analysis group predicts that 46 percent of  the total spending in net new growth areas will be in five cloud-related  markets:  applications, app development  and deployment, basic storage, servers and systems infrastructure software. This  growth will account for a global spending total of $72.9 billion -- a huge  increase over 2010's spending total of $21.5 billion. 
IDC is basing its predictions on the growing adoption of  smartphones, tablets and Facebook in the enterprise.
"Cloud services are interconnected with and accelerated  by other disruptive technologies, including mobile devices, wireless networks,  big data analytics, and social networking," said Frank Gens, senior vice  president and chief analyst at IDC, in a released statement. "Together,  these technologies are merging into the industry's third major platform for  long-term growth. As during the mainframe and PC eras, the new platform promises  to radically expand the users and uses of information technology, leading to a  wide and entirely new variety of intelligent industry solutions."  
The United    States, already the highest-spending region  in the public cloud market, will account for 50 percent of all revenue by 2015.  However, the percentage of growth in non-U.S. territories will grow at a faster  rate as cloud adoption becomes more prevalent. 
The software-as-a-service (SaaS) market is projected by IDC to  be the biggest cloud segment winner, accruing roughly a third of the growth by  2015. IDC based this prediction on the success of SaaS providers in improving their  infrastructures to cater to larger numbers of clients. 
Although the study accounts for IT spending in the public  cloud sector, it does not include figures from private cloud deployments. 
"While private clouds provide the customer with the  ability to specify access limitations and the level of resource dedication  beyond what is currently available in public cloud offerings, IDC's expectation  is that public clouds will mature and eventually incorporate many of the  capabilities (particularly security and availability) that make private clouds  a more attractive option today," IDC commented in a press  release.