The 2020s are not over. Not even half ways.
Short answer: yes, and that's a good thing.
Slightly longer answer: it's a sign of maturity for the most popular distributions and of the platforms at large. Innovation tends to happen in the fringes. Being it free software, someone can always fork the software and add their new ideas to the mix.
If I teach them, they'll find it boring. Better to be a role model and answer questions if they have them.
Writing with it right now. I think i just disabled gboard for good.
TabStash is the name of the extension that solved my tabs problems. Now I have hundreds of tabs "open", but they are neatly organized (stashed).
I have a Kobo Clara which is nice for reading and a Kindle Scribe which is nice for writing. Actually I wanted to get (and still want to get at some point) the Supernote A5X, but it's difficult and expensive to get where I live.
Nowadays KDE.
Newpipe on Android and just blocking the ads on the browser.
Because it's better.
Because it's open source.
Because it's not based on Chromium and competition is good.
And also because TabStash.
I'm grateful to be able to use AppImages for everything that's not in the repos or for anything that I need updated as soon as upstream updates. So far it has worked seamlessly. It's the most user friendly solution of the lot and I don't need sandboxing.
KDE. Because of its simplicity. Unsarcastically.