What is the Tech Radar?

The SOK Tech Radar is a list of technologies, complemented by an assessment result, called ring assignment. We use four rings with the following semantics:

  • ADOPT — Technologies we have high confidence in to serve our purpose, also in large scale. Technologies with a usage culture in our SOK production environment, low risk and recommended to be widely used.
  • TRIAL — Technologies that we have seen work with success in project work to solve a real problem; first serious usage experience that confirm benefits and can uncover limitations. TRIAL technologies are slightly more risky; some engineers in our organization walked this path and will share knowledge and experiences.
  • ASSESS — Technologies that are promising and have clear potential value-add for us; technologies worth to invest some research and prototyping efforts in to see if it has impact. ASSESS technologies have higher risks; they are often brand new and highly unproven in our organisation. You will find some engineers that have knowledge in the technology and promote it, you may even find teams that have started a prototyping effort.
  • HOLD — Technologies not recommended to be used for new projects. Technologies that we think are not (yet) worth to (further) invest in. HOLD technologies should not be used for new projects, but usually can be continued for existing projects.

What is the purpose?

The SOK Tech Radar is a tool to inspire and support engineering teams at SOK to pick the best technologies for new projects. Our Tech Radar sets out the changes in technologies that are interesting in software development and what engineering teams should pay attention to and consider using in their projects.

How do we maintain it?

The SOK Tech Radar is maintained by our Development Guidelines developer community and facilitated by our DevOps & Platform team. Radar is constructed by teams listing their used technologies and evaluating those maturity. This Radar is result of that process and we encourage all teams to base their future technology decissions on existing knowledge.