I don't think "computers stay up a long time these days" is an argument against doing OS research on order-of-magnitude-faster, byte-addressable persistent storage.
We seem to be doing pretty well with a bunch of abstractions from the 1970s, as well as with the idea of just building giant trapdoors into our hardware whenever these abstractions fail (e.g. most databases, DPDK in the network space, etc). It's not a crisis. It just seems like a pretty good time to do some basic OS research (aside from all the usual headwinds for that, e.g. massive complexity of underlying hardware, difficulty finding meaningful workloads for a "toy" OS, etc).
We seem to be doing pretty well with a bunch of abstractions from the 1970s, as well as with the idea of just building giant trapdoors into our hardware whenever these abstractions fail (e.g. most databases, DPDK in the network space, etc). It's not a crisis. It just seems like a pretty good time to do some basic OS research (aside from all the usual headwinds for that, e.g. massive complexity of underlying hardware, difficulty finding meaningful workloads for a "toy" OS, etc).