 One of my favorite examples for technology being used to get technology out of the way is the anti-lock brake system in your car. Your car, for all cars, has an anti-lock brake system. So when you slam on the brakes, you are not mechanically connected to the actual brake pads in your car. You are talking to a robot. You don't realize it, but the brake pedal is now an interface. It is a request that's being sent to a robot saying, here's how fast I would like to stop. And then the robot essentially thinks to itself, hmm, that's interesting. I got you. Let me see what I can do with that request. But then it takes that under advisement, but pumps the brake in a way that's actually meant to do two things. Stop about as fast as you want to stop, subject to the additional constraint of not going into a skid. That is a beautiful example because all of that happens without you having to think about the complexity of it. I only notice it when the benefit it gives me is gone, but otherwise I'm unaware of it. That's how technology should be.