I think I've seen that... SMBC maybe?
Dresden files handles it by simply having the magic cause problems with technology. The smaller the parts required for something to function, the more magic messes it up.
Yeah, Lirael and Sabriel have the same principle.
However I know of other series which have magic being this illusive element which offers itself to whoever says "hocus pocus" in the right way with the right finger wiggles.
... Not sure where this segway'd from but now I'm hooked on it so I'm gonna speel some more.
I know of another series (cannot remember) which has mages do large and complicated rituals to make their effects happen, but the ritual can be paused indefinitely, so they do 99% of the ritual each morning or something and walk around with a bunch of willow sticks they can snap or flick or shout at etc so they can throw fireballs in a pinch.
Then there's the Tamora ones which have most of the more powerful mages pull the mana from the world around them to fuel their stuff, which never really gets explained or revisited, but there's some who can use words of power which create awesome miracles to happen there, and awful disasters to happen somewhere else on the globe.
Whilst Dresden has the necessity of the huge rituals and white robes and mystic circles alleviated by enough mental focus that you can just
imagine all of that happening, down to exact timing and motions, and then binding said huge convoluted mental process to a keyphrase or something so that it can be recalled and used in battle.
Which, after revisiting all that, makes the raggedy lady sound Waay more hardcore.
Uh... Point being, in a fair few series I'd happily call magic a 'science'.
I guess it's in series like Magician where that comes apart, with one of Feist's biggest spellcasters in the universe being famous for the phrase "there is no magic. Just tricks".
Though yeah I think magic vs technology divide does work better if the magic of the period is "You Have The Blood Time To Make Fire".
Or, it could just be the natural animosity between those who devoted their life to eldrich runes and those who devoted their life to t' slidin' rule.