Ask HN: Examples of “Gradual” or “Integrated” Technology?

3 points by rosetremiere ↗ HN
As far as I can see, people today often play on the opposition between "high" and "low" tech. The idea being that "high" tech is often:

* not ecological;

* not repairable;

* not robust (inflexible, finicky, buggy, etc);

* not democratic;

whereas "low" tech fares better in those respects. I understand it as high-tech being a kind of black-box which final users can only consume without the possibility to tweak, repair, understand and evolve.

I'm looking for examples of what I would call "gradual" or "integrated" technology, in the sense that the object makes use of high tech concepts, either in its conception, or its operation, but where the high-tech aspect does not preclude low-tech use and tweakability/repairability/understandability/evolvability. Said differently, the high-tech aspect only _adds_ to the product, and does not subtract anything.

I know it's a bit of a vaguely question, but hopefully someone can come along and help me crystallize it :)

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