Anselm Audley's Aquasilva Trilogy features some kinds of tech (although not much you'd recognise) and some kinds of magic, and is quite atypical as a fantasy epic.
Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy is all about the supernature while simultaneously being full of science. I just have to read the last book, now...
Terry Pratchett occasionally throws technological advancement into the Diskworld, but it tends to have philisophical overtones and serves as a plot vehicle more than predictable technology.
Dianna Wynne Jones writes books which tend to feature magic outside the medieval genre; the only exception I can think of is A Tale Of Time City, which you should read anyway, as most of that tech might as well be magic.
J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter series is set in the modern day, and while it occasionally features crossovers between magic and tech, it more often features magic doing trivial technological tasks better.
John Ringo's There Will Be Dragons (and possibly subsequent books) is set in a 41st century technological utopia, but things take a change for the strange and by the end of the book people are fighting siege battles against orcs where the highest-tech weapon is a longsword. Plus, the hardcover comes with a CD containing half the books Baen's ever published and a note saying 'do whatever you want with this CD's data, just don't charge money'. Great value there.
Diane Duane's books about young wizards, her related books about cat wizards, and the unrelated Stealing the Elf-King's Roses all feature a modern-day setting with magic in it. There's some good reading in there. You also get Tiger-Satan fighting T-Rex-Satan, and it makes sense.
As Pants said, China Mieville is all about the industrial-fantasy-punk whatchamacallit. Fantasy without limits.
An awful lot of generic fantasy fiction features a technological background; they tend to call it the Age of Wonders or something similar, but it doesn't factor into the story much. Probably the greatest exception is in The Lord Of The Rings, which throws lots of industrial processes into the hands of the villains (moreso in the books than in the more generic-fantasy movies, though).
But the ultimate place for mixing tech and magic? Comic books. I'll give you a rundown of three titles. Marvel's Avengers is headlined by three characters: Captain America (upgraded human), Iron Man (power armour and tech whiz), and Thor (god of thunder, whose portfolio was at one point taken over by an orange alien). The Justice League features the last survivors of two dead worlds; a Greek goddess; and a galactic space ranger (who happens to carry the most powerful weapon in the Universe on his finger). Crossgen's Mystic takes place on some other planet, somewhere, ruled by seven guildmasters with Great Powers, but also features flying taxis and looks rather like the 1920s. (Sadly, with Crossgen's recent troubles, tracking down this book may become difficult.)
Most of these stories are crazy, unique things, of course - trendstarters or their own beast altogether. But that's what you'd expect...