That's fair. Using tools is a skill. We all have different levels of, uh, enthusiasm for exploring and finding them. I just lack the drive to find the perfect tool, similar to how I lost the drive to endlessly customize my phone.
It just feels like a waste of time relative to the other ways I would prefer to spend my time. You could argue that makes me an inferior developer, and I would gladly concede.
What I scrimp on "craftmanship skill points" I gladly put into "empathy and philosophy" ones. Not that they're mutually exclusive, but I got burnt out on trying to solve the wrong problem too many times that I overtrained on connecting with people and trying to ask "are we solving the right problem?"
I guess I could apply that skill to "can I find better tools or use the tools I have better," but that just doesn't feel like a limiting factor, to me.
> You assume that people can know what tools they need.
Not what I was trying to communicate. I was conveying the opposite — you can't know what you need until you're facing a real problem in a real domain, not an imagined one or a simulated environment. So, rather than try to find the best tools for "all time," let the immediate sticking point drive the process of finding and learning tools, evaluated against what solves the problem at hand (with the context of everything you know up until that point, of course).