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"Poised between intransigent scepticism and uncritical credulity, it [science fiction] is par excellence the literature of the open mind."
- John Brunner

Dingbat  
  An alien mechanical parasite.  

On a strange alien planet, a mechanical parasite developed.

The man looked dully at Dan. “Charlie’s the name,” he said. “Buy a Little Dingbat... electropen, wrist watch, pocketphone, pocket radio, billfold ... all in one.”

“Doesn’t sound practical,” said Dan. “I’ve built a few gadgets myself, but I wouldn’t try to stick a radio in a pen and then try to use it for a watch to boot.”

“There’s space for a pack of cigarettes,” said the salesman. “Buy one for the lady? Plenty of compact room.”

Dan Courtland picked up one. They were shapeless little blobs about four inches long and weighing about a half pound...

"...I’m an inventor — but I wish I was as good as the guy who invented this combination washing machine, street car, and fire truck, providing it works. Wonder if it actually gives the time.”

He took one of the Dingbats out of his pocket. A large, delicately figured watch face showed him the time.

“That’s funny,” he muttered. “I'd swear that didn’t have a watch face on it before. It must have a snap cover that slid back as I took it out...

As soon as class was over, Dan took the Little Dingbat into the lab behind the classroom and put it on a bench. He sat down and looked at it. From one angle it seemed to be cubical and gray. From another it seemed round and slightly green. Dan turned it around. It looked more like a flat disk from this side...

He laughed to himself. Combination pen and watch and portable radio!

...He picked up the Dingbat as if it were an electropen, and then he saw that the corner that had been turned away from him actually did contain a point. But why hadn’t he seen it when that side had been facing him? He turned the Dingbat over and it fitted comfortably into his hand. It wrote smoothly and more rapidly than any other he had ever used.

Technovelgy from Deadly Host, by Raymond F. Jones.
Published by Astounding Science Fiction in 1945
Additional resources -

They come from the planet of Sian, described as a "mechanical world".

“Historians have tried to prove that the Sianese are the results of a civilization conquered by the robots it built to serve it. No one knows any facts that are really certain except that Sianese history goes back about sixty thousand years and stops abruptly. No petering out. Just stops.

“The Sianese themselves are completely mechanical. Brains, appendages, and all. No one has ever seen anything of the insides of one. We know only that they exist. They wear out or die. And they reproduce by a method of group construction. I am the only man who has ever observed the process. I was able to see once how eight of them gathered around a workbench and took enough parts out of themselves to assemble a ninth creature that joined them apparently as intelligent and able as themselves. I believe that certain specialized mechanisms within the Sianese are constantly producing these parts used in assembling others.”

“And so?” said Dan.

“On Sian there are life forms of metal that are as different from each other as are the life forms of Earth. There are animals there, and insects, and even a peculiar sort of thing that is almost plantlike.”

Bud stopped and Dan kept looking at him. “Keep going.” "

“The Dingbats.” said Bud, “are insects of Sian.”

“Insects!”

“Right. Mechanical insects, a particularly deadly breed. The Sianese try to exterminate them with little radiation guns just like we spray flies.”

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from Deadly Host
  More Ideas and Technology by Raymond F. Jones
  Tech news articles related to Deadly Host
  Tech news articles related to works by Raymond F. Jones

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