Melvin Krazenberg’s Six Laws of Technology1. “Technology is neither good or bad; nor is it neutral.”The impact of a technology depends on its geographic and cultural context, which means it can be both simultaneously. 2. “Invention is the mother of necessity.”Every technical invention seems to require additional technical advances in order to make it fully effective. 3. “Technology comes in packages, big and small.”To understand any part of a technology package requires looking at its interactions with and dependency on the rest of it. 4. Although technology might be a prime element in many public issues, nontechnical factors take precedence in technology-policy decisions.” 5. “All history is relevant, but the history of technology is the most relevant.Many times history is driven by what technology makes possible. (One can’t help but also assume bias that comes from Kranzberg teaching The History of Technology course at Georgia Institue of Technology.) 6. “Technology is a very human activity.” (Excerpted from WSJ article “The Six Laws of Technology Everyone Should Know” by Christopher Mims.)