This sounds like an old person ranting about the good ol' days
when it's probably a personal phobia against change.
Crafting software requires a fine balance between getting stuff done with what you know and losing productivity because you're stuck with older technology.
Some of my best decisions as a software craftsman required change. Subversion to Git, PHP to Ruby on Rails, VPN to Heroku, all helped me build great stuff far more effectively. And some of my biggest problems came from attempting to adopt new technology x instead of building something great quickly with what I already knew.
I don't have a simple answer for maintaining that balance. It's hard. Being aware of needing that balance is a great first step. Complaining about change, though, seems to be the least productive response. Can I build something great right now? No? OK, can I learn something new right now? No? OK, then some downtime might be my best choice.
Some of my best decisions as a software craftsman required change. Subversion to Git, PHP to Ruby on Rails, VPN to Heroku, all helped me build great stuff far more effectively. And some of my biggest problems came from attempting to adopt new technology x instead of building something great quickly with what I already knew.
I don't have a simple answer for maintaining that balance. It's hard. Being aware of needing that balance is a great first step. Complaining about change, though, seems to be the least productive response. Can I build something great right now? No? OK, can I learn something new right now? No? OK, then some downtime might be my best choice.
For right now.