IBM (NYSE: IBM), the world’s biggest computer-services provider, will double its investment in mobile technology this year, not including acquisitions it could make in the industry.

Chief Executive Officer Ginni Rometty will move employees and resources to mobile technology as part of the investment, said Robert LeBlanc, senior vice president of middleware software at IBM. Rometty is prioritizing mobile as much as some of the company’s more high-profile initiatives, like cloud computing and business data analysis, he said.

“If you talked to Ginni and asked her what the key growth plays are for IBM, she would tell you mobility is one of them,” LeBlanc said in an interview with Bloomberg news “We’re moving some of our skill and resources into mobility as a growth play.”

The company plans to announce today that it will combine a set of technology tools, accumulated from 10 acquisitions since 2006, into products and services for business customers looking specifically for help with mobile computing. The branding push, called “MobileFirst,” is the company’s “stake in the ground” as its clients shift their workload to tablets and smartphones, LeBlanc said.

IBM’s new offerings range from data analysis that helps businesses see how employees are using smartphones to tools for companies to create their own mobile applications. LeBlanc declined to provide specific figures for Armonk, New York-based IBM’s investment in mobile.
In addition to its expanding internal investment, IBM continues to be on the lookout for acquisitions that could enhance its mobile services, LeBlanc said.

IBM Boosts STEM at Epcot

On Wednesday, IBM gave STEM education a boost with a new exhibition at Disney’s Epcot theme part.

Big Blue opened a THINK exhibit that includes mobile apps and free curriculum for lessons in classrooms.

The exhibit “Ifeatures a gesture-controlled video wall, filled with images visitors can control as they walk past; a movie on the history of science and technology (in which big data analytics play a starring role as the wave of the future); and an array of touchscreen columns, each the size of a large refrigerator, for exploring topics in science and technology,” InformationWeek reports.

IBM employs some 10,000 people across North Carolina.

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