I have two nephews, one lives close to me and I see him frequently. the other lives about 1.200 miles away and I rarely see him.
But I did see him last week. He is taller than me now, I was surprised. ((I'm over 6 ft). But then, the one that lives close to me is also.
I guess I never noticed because I see him all the time. I had to go back and look some pictures from 4 or 5 years back, wow,
time flies.
So what does this have to do with Linux?
I was talking with someone the other day about some specific Linux technologies.
Wayland, Pipewire, NetworkManager, systemd, and a few others.. he says he doesn't like to use them, because they are "too new".
But as it turns out, all of them are over a decade old. Most have been in mainstream distro at least 5 or 6 years now.
A couple are almost 20 years old. wow. Old enough for my nephews to be taller than me.
But I wonder sometimes, does Linux technology just pass by sometimes? The same day, I was taking to someone
on the site about networkd and ifconfig files. I admit, I still have some old rhel 5.x servers, that they won't let me update.
But the questions remains... are we "tool close" to see how fast things change, or too far away

It's easy to see the differences when you've been away for a while, but sometimes hard to see, when you see it eveyday.
Well, that's my soapbox rant for 2026, I'll go take my meds and settle back down.

But I did see him last week. He is taller than me now, I was surprised. ((I'm over 6 ft). But then, the one that lives close to me is also.
I guess I never noticed because I see him all the time. I had to go back and look some pictures from 4 or 5 years back, wow,
time flies.
So what does this have to do with Linux?
I was talking with someone the other day about some specific Linux technologies.
Wayland, Pipewire, NetworkManager, systemd, and a few others.. he says he doesn't like to use them, because they are "too new".
But as it turns out, all of them are over a decade old. Most have been in mainstream distro at least 5 or 6 years now.
A couple are almost 20 years old. wow. Old enough for my nephews to be taller than me.
But I wonder sometimes, does Linux technology just pass by sometimes? The same day, I was taking to someone
on the site about networkd and ifconfig files. I admit, I still have some old rhel 5.x servers, that they won't let me update.
But the questions remains... are we "tool close" to see how fast things change, or too far away
It's easy to see the differences when you've been away for a while, but sometimes hard to see, when you see it eveyday.
Well, that's my soapbox rant for 2026, I'll go take my meds and settle back down.

