The Raspberry Pi 5 is the prominent headline these days, and I get why. It’s faster, it feels more modern, and it has a momentum that makes every older board look like a compromise. Still, the Raspberry Pi I actually rely on day to day is the Raspberry Pi 4, and that choice has less to do with nostalgia than it does with outcomes. When I need something to stay online, behave predictably, and quietly do its job, the Pi 4 keeps earning its spot.