Amish tradition disallows electricity, cars, and television. It shuns modern lifestyle, culture, and values. But they aren't total Luddites — in fact, the Amish community has developed a tech gadget culture all its own. "In the Amish mind, technology itself is not considered sinful or immoral," writes Donald Kraybill in his new addendum to his book The Amish. "Like a knife which can cut bread or kill someone, tools can be used to help or to harm, to build up or tear down communities." So, instead of flat-out rejecting all technology, modern Amish just hack it to fit their needs.

Flickr: sergemelki This Amish iron runs on propane, not electricity.

With major technological advancements, from the car to electricity to the telephone, different Amish churches have come up with their own methods of adaptation. Each church community votes on their guidelines and rules, dictated by Amish tradition. Cars are generally banned, for example, but some churches have made exceptions to allow drivers for business or emergency needs. There are no phones at home, but some have built communal "phone shanties" — essentially wooden outdoor phone booths. Some are even allowed non-smart cell phones as long as they aren't brought inside the house.

Via books.google.com The Riddle of Amish Culture, Revised Edition, by Donald Kraybill. Published by Johns Hopkins University Press. Reproduced by permission of the publisher and the author.

"Amish are all about the loopholes," says Chris Weber, who works with Amish youth. "The best way to create an exception is to have it be dependent on business." Rules about what is kept in the home and what is actually owned by an Amish individual are strict. There is a wide variety of leniency, but amongst the more liberal, there is lots of wiggle room.

Via books.google.com Electric lights are banned, hence the lantern, but an inverter can power a cash register. From The Riddle of Amish Culture, Revised Edition, by Donald Kraybill. Published by Johns Hopkins University Press. Reproduced by permission of the publisher and the author.

Amish prohibit electricity, largely because connecting to the grid literally connects Amish homes to the outside world, through electric wires. So, instead of plugging in, they rely on "Amish electricity": combinations of diesel generators, batteries and car batteries, solar panels, hydraulic pumps, and compressed air pressure to run appliances, pump water, and power electric fences.

Diesel engines power air and hydraulic pumps. From The Riddle of Amish Culture, Revised Edition, by Donald Kraybill. Published by Johns Hopkins University Press. Reproduced by permission of the publisher and the author.

Another trick: To pull electric motors out of power drills and other small machines, and replace them with pneumatic motors, which are driven by gas-powered air compressors. Generators are used to charge car batteries that run signals on buggies (required by law).

Flickr: sergemelki No need to plug in if you have propane.

One of the most recent — and most controversial — hacks is the Amish computer. Allen Hoover, an Old Order "horse and buggy" Mennonnite, invented what he calls the "Classic Word Processor" that's "made specifically for the plain people by the plain people." Since then several others have created similar computers. Hoover, who lives in rural Pennsylvania, makes his living retrofitting woodworking tools to run on alternative power, mainly for Amish clients. As word processors were being replaced with computers that had internet capabilities, he saw a need for a stripped-down machine for Amish, according to the Farm Show newsletter. He consulted local Amish church groups to find out the rules and what they wanted; the most popular request was for spreadsheets for inventory, tracking and creating receipts. Then he teamed up with computer programmers, using open-source software, to built the ultimate Amish computer. "This is 10 times as fast and has 100 times the memory of old word processors," Hoover told Farm Show newsletter in 2007. (Hoover was unavailable for comment.) "Not just a locked computer; no modem, no phone port or internet connection, no outside programs, no sound, no photographs, no games or gimmicks" reads the black-and-white advertisement. "Nothing fancy. Just a work horse for your business."

Introducing the Amish computer Via amishinternet.com