I just referenced the story a couple of weeks ago. It’s having a renaissance!
What’s fascinating about it is the rare extrapolation of psychology in tune with extrapolated technology. And showing that inventions develop meaning from the way that societies use them, not the other way around. And notice that - in 1962 - he named his startup “Micro Systems.”
The story never got reprinted in an anthology until recently, though. Probably because it was too weird. Frederik Pohl had taken over Galaxy from the ailing H. L. Gold and Pohl was the most progressive editor in the field in 1962. Leiber is wildly underrated today, probably he got into a weird phase that had a cult following but not much more.
As an example, also in 1962 he released The Silver Eggheads (vastly expanded from a simpler 1959 novelette). I don’t care what drugs Philip K. Dick was on at the time; that book make Dick read like Asimov.