While the notion of "magic versus technology" can make for fun fiction, it's an entirely preposterous notion. Technology is not some mystical entity that can oppose or be opposed. It's merely applied knowledge.
Magic cannot exist. Period. If what you would call magic exists, it's merely some set of phenomena you don't understand. To wield it, you need to figure out how it works (knowledge) well enough to use it (applied knowledge -> technology). In essence, when you use magic you're simply using technology of some sort. So trying to claim that magic and technology are in conflict is silly.
Also, anyone who suggests that magic has no laws (thus you can't figure out how it works and so forth) is silly. If it obeys no laws, then not only is it strictly impossible to consistently use it, but it will not produce meaningful effects either. It would effectively be a random element in the universe. You'd never encounter a fireball, as that's too ordered an event. It's not random. In fact, if it were random, with no bounds (no laws = no restrictions on the magnitude of any effects), it's quite reasonable to expect that it'd utterly overwhelm physical laws to the point that they may as well not exist. The universe wouldn't have the necessary stability for anything you know to exist, including yourself. In short, so-called magic must have rules simply because the universe bears some semblance of order.
That is all.