home / skills / jwynia / agent-skills / technology-impact
This skill helps evaluate new technologies using McLuhan's Tetrad to reveal enhancement, obsolescence, retrieval, and reversal impacts for policy, adoption,
npx playbooks add skill jwynia/agent-skills --skill technology-impactReview the files below or copy the command above to add this skill to your agents.
---
name: technology-impact
description: Systematically analyze societal impacts of technologies using McLuhan's Tetrad of Media Effects. Use when evaluating new technology, planning technology adoption, or analyzing technology policy.
license: MIT
metadata:
author: jwynia
version: "1.0"
type: utility
mode: evaluative
domain: worldbuilding
---
# Technology Impact Analysis (McLuhan Tetrad)
## Purpose
Systematically analyze the societal impacts of technologies using McLuhan's Tetrad of Media Effects. Examines what technology enhances, obsoletes, retrieves, and reverses to reveal non-obvious consequences.
## Core Framework: The Tetrad
Every technology simultaneously has four effects:
| Effect | Question | What It Reveals |
|--------|----------|-----------------|
| **Enhancement** | What does it amplify? | Primary capabilities increased |
| **Obsolescence** | What does it displace? | What becomes less relevant |
| **Retrieval** | What does it bring back? | Historical patterns revived |
| **Reversal** | What does it become when pushed to extreme? | Paradoxical consequences |
---
## Core Tetrad Questions
### Enhancement
- What capabilities, processes, or tendencies does this technology amplify?
- How does enhancement manifest across different contexts?
- What are primary and secondary enhancement effects?
### Obsolescence
- What existing systems, skills, or practices does it displace?
- Which displaced elements might persist in modified forms?
- What are the implications of these obsolescences?
### Retrieval
- What historical practices or patterns does it revive in new forms?
- How do these retrievals manifest differently from originals?
- What historical understanding informs our analysis?
### Reversal
- What happens when enhancement effects are pushed to extremes?
- What paradoxical effects emerge from widespread adoption?
- How might current trends reverse themselves?
---
## Analysis Dimensions
### 1. Domain Analysis
Examine each societal domain:
**Economic**
- Production systems
- Labor markets
- Financial systems
- Business models
- Consumer behavior
**Social**
- Interpersonal relationships
- Community structures
- Social mobility
- Cultural expression
- Identity formation
**Political**
- Governance systems
- Democratic processes
- Power distribution
- Policy formation
- Civic engagement
**Educational**
- Learning systems
- Knowledge transfer
- Skill development
- Educational access
**Healthcare**
- Care delivery
- Medical research
- Health management
- Healthcare access
**Environmental**
- Resource usage
- Sustainability practices
- Climate impact
- Ecosystem management
### 2. Stakeholder Impact
For each effect, examine impact on:
**Demographics**
- Age groups
- Socioeconomic classes
- Geographic locations
- Educational backgrounds
**Power Structures**
- Existing authorities
- Emerging players
- Resource controllers
- Knowledge holders
**Vulnerable Populations**
- Economic vulnerability
- Digital divide impacts
- Accessibility concerns
- Cultural marginalization
### 3. Temporal Analysis
**Time Horizons**
- Immediate (0-2 years)
- Short-term (2-5 years)
- Medium-term (5-10 years)
- Long-term (10+ years)
**Development Patterns**
- Adoption curves
- Resistance patterns
- Acceleration points
- Stabilization periods
**Historical Parallels**
- Similar technological transitions
- Pattern repetitions
- Lessons from history
### 4. Systemic Interactions
**Cross-Domain Effects**
- How changes in one domain affect others
- Cascading impacts
- Feedback loops
- Emergent properties
**Equilibrium Shifts**
- New balances forming
- Destabilized systems
- Adaptation patterns
**Power Dynamics**
- Authority shifts
- Control mechanisms
- Resource allocation
---
## Application Process
### 1. Initial Scoping
- Define specific technology/application
- Identify primary domains of impact
- Establish analysis timeframe
- Define stakeholder scope
### 2. Systematic Examination
- Apply core tetrad questions to each domain
- Document direct and indirect effects
- Identify cross-domain interactions
- Map stakeholder impacts
### 3. Pattern Analysis
- Identify recurring themes
- Note unusual effects
- Document contradictions
- Map interaction patterns
### 4. Impact Assessment
- Evaluate significance of effects
- Assess probability of outcomes
- Identify critical uncertainties
- Define key indicators
### 5. Documentation
- Record findings systematically
- Map relationships
- Document assumptions
- Note areas for further study
---
## Analysis Template
### Technology: [Name]
**Enhancement:**
What it amplifies:
-
-
**Obsolescence:**
What it displaces:
-
-
**Retrieval:**
What it brings back:
-
-
**Reversal:**
What it becomes at extreme:
-
-
### Domain Impacts
| Domain | Enhancement | Obsolescence | Retrieval | Reversal |
|--------|-------------|--------------|-----------|----------|
| Economic | | | | |
| Social | | | | |
| Political | | | | |
| Educational | | | | |
| Healthcare | | | | |
| Environmental | | | | |
### Stakeholder Analysis
| Group | Positive Effects | Negative Effects | Net Assessment |
|-------|------------------|------------------|----------------|
| | | | |
### Temporal Projections
| Timeframe | Most Likely Effects |
|-----------|---------------------|
| Immediate | |
| Short-term | |
| Medium-term | |
| Long-term | |
### Key Uncertainties
1.
2.
3.
---
## Example: Smartphone
**Enhancement:**
- Communication immediacy
- Information access
- Personal documentation (photos, notes)
- Navigation capability
**Obsolescence:**
- Paper maps
- Point-and-shoot cameras
- Landline phones
- Physical newspapers
**Retrieval:**
- Oral culture (voice messages, podcasts)
- Visual culture (image-based communication)
- Constant connectivity (pre-modern village awareness)
**Reversal:**
- Communication enhancement → isolation through screens
- Information access → attention fragmentation
- Connection → addiction and dependency
- Personal documentation → surveillance infrastructure
---
## Anti-Patterns
### 1. The Techno-Utopian
**Pattern:** Only analyzing enhancement effects. Focusing on what technology enables while ignoring what it destroys, retrieves, or reverses.
**Why it fails:** Creates incomplete analysis that misses critical consequences. Every enhancement has a shadow—ignoring it leads to surprised stakeholders.
**Fix:** Force yourself through all four quadrants. The reversal quadrant is especially important for identifying unintended consequences.
### 2. The Surface Analysis
**Pattern:** Identifying immediate effects without tracing systemic implications. "Social media enhances connection" without examining what connection means at scale.
**Why it fails:** First-order effects are obvious; value comes from second and third-order analysis. Surface analysis tells stakeholders nothing they don't already know.
**Fix:** For each effect, ask "and then what?" at least twice. Map cross-domain cascades. Identify feedback loops.
### 3. The Historical Blindness
**Pattern:** Analyzing technology in isolation without examining historical parallels. Missing that we've seen similar patterns before.
**Why it fails:** History reveals patterns that inform projections. The printing press, telegraph, and telephone all have lessons for digital technology.
**Fix:** Explicitly identify 2-3 historical analogs. What was enhanced, obsolesced, retrieved, reversed then? What patterns persist?
### 4. The Stakeholder Collapse
**Pattern:** Treating all stakeholders as homogeneous. "Users will experience..." without differentiating who wins and who loses.
**Why it fails:** Technology redistributes power unevenly. Analysis that ignores differential impact misses the most important political dimensions.
**Fix:** Segment stakeholders by power position, access, and capability. Analyze each quadrant for each stakeholder class.
### 5. The Timeframe Conflation
**Pattern:** Mixing immediate and long-term effects without distinguishing timelines. "This will obsolete X" without specifying when or under what conditions.
**Why it fails:** Timelines matter for planning. Something that becomes obsolete in 20 years requires different strategy than something obsolete next year.
**Fix:** Separate effects by timeframe: immediate (0-2 years), short-term (2-5), medium-term (5-10), long-term (10+).
## Integration Points
**Inbound:**
- When evaluating new technology
- When planning technology adoption
- When analyzing technology policy
**Outbound:**
- To decision-making processes
- To policy recommendations
**Complementary:**
- `media-meta-analysis`: For analyzing discourse about technology
- Research frameworks: For gathering evidence
This skill systematically analyzes societal impacts of technologies using McLuhan's Tetrad of Media Effects. It reveals what a technology enhances, what it makes obsolete, what it retrieves from the past, and what it becomes when pushed to extremes. Use it to surface non-obvious consequences and guide adoption, policy, or strategy decisions.
Apply the Tetrad (Enhancement, Obsolescence, Retrieval, Reversal) across defined domains (economic, social, political, educational, healthcare, environmental). Map effects by stakeholder groups and time horizons, identify cross-domain interactions and feedback loops, and produce a ranked assessment of significance and uncertainty. The process includes scoping, systematic examination, pattern analysis, impact assessment, and documentation.
How long does a typical analysis take?
Scoping and a high-level tetrad run can take a few days; a full domain- and stakeholder-detailed assessment typically takes several weeks depending on data depth.
What evidence sources are recommended?
Combine technical documentation, user behavior data, historical analogs, stakeholder interviews, and domain-specific research to validate tetrad claims and temporal projections.