Navigating the Tech Landscape: A Guide to Using the ThoughtWorks Technology Radar

Introduction

The ThoughtWorks Technology Radar is a biannual survey that captures the collective experience of the company's technologists. The 34th edition, released recently, includes 118 blips covering tools, techniques, platforms, and languages. A theme is the dominance of AI, but also a return to foundational practices. This guide will help you understand and apply the radar's insights to your own technology decisions, focusing on AI, security, and engineering discipline.

Navigating the Tech Landscape: A Guide to Using the ThoughtWorks Technology Radar
Source: martinfowler.com

What You Need

  • Access to the latest Technology Radar (free at thoughtworks.com/radar)
  • Basic understanding of AI/LLMs and their role in software development
  • Familiarity with software engineering practices (pair programming, testing, architecture)
  • Interest in security and agent-based systems
  • A journal or digital notes to record your observations and action items

How to Use the Radar: Step by Step

  1. Step 1: Explore the Radar’s Structure and Blips

    Begin by browsing the radar online. It is organized into four quadrants: Techniques, Tools, Platforms, and Languages & Frameworks. Each blip has a status (Adopt, Trial, Assess, Hold) and a brief description. Take notes on blips that resonate with your current projects or interests. Pay special attention to those marked “Hold” – they may indicate technologies to avoid or revisit later.

  2. Step 2: Identify AI-Related Trends

    AI dominates this edition, so filter by AI keywords. Look for blips that discuss LLM-assisted development, agentic tools, and prompt engineering. For example, the radar highlights how AI is forcing a revisit of fundamentals like clean code and zero trust architecture. Understand that AI tools can accelerate but also introduce complexity. Create a list of AI blips that are relevant to your team’s stack.

  3. Step 3: Revisit Foundational Practices

    The radar emphasizes a return to core software craftsmanship: pair programming, mutation testing, DORA metrics, and accessibility. Step back from AI hype and evaluate your team’s discipline in these areas. For each practice, ask: Are we doing this well? Could it help us manage AI-generated complexity? For instance, pair programming can catch issues in AI-generated code, and mutation testing can verify test coverage.

  4. Step 4: Address Security for “Permission-Hungry” Agents

    Agents require broad access to systems, but security safeguards lag. Use the radar’s security-related blips to improve your agent architecture. Consider techniques like prompt injection prevention, least-privilege design, and careful sandboxing. The radar mentions OpenClaw, Claude Cowork, and Gas Town as examples. For each agent you deploy, define explicit permissions and monitoring.

  5. Step 5: Implement Harness Engineering

    Many blips in this edition focus on harness engineering – the guides and sensors that keep AI agents under control. Based on the radar meeting, this is a key theme. Identify blips that suggest specific harness components, such as monitoring dashboards, policy engines, or audit logs. Design a harness for your most critical agents. Expect the list to grow by the next radar.

  6. Step 6: Document and Share Your Findings

    Create a summary of your radar exploration, focusing on 5–10 blips that have the highest impact for your organization. Share it with your team via a short presentation or internal wiki. Encourage others to add their own observations. The radar is a living document – use it as a basis for ongoing discussion, not a one-time read.

Tips for Getting the Most Out of the Radar

  • Stay current: The radar is biannual – set a reminder to revisit each new edition.
  • Don’t just adopt blindly: “Trial” and “Assess” mean you should experiment but be prepared to drop a technology if it doesn’t fit.
  • Combine insights: Pair AI blips with security or technique blips for a holistic view.
  • Engage with the community: ThoughtWorks often runs webinars on radar highlights – attend to deepen understanding.
  • Use the radar as a conversation starter: Ask your team: What blips surprise us? Which ones should we test?
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