At last check there were 15,576,628 answers and 9,320,001 questions on Stack Overflow. That is a LOT of posts to be worried about becoming outdated and reviewing.
Who becomes responsible for updating a post? Is it the person who originally wrote the post? If so, you have 160 posts at this time. Are you going to constantly update all of those? What about the users that are more active? The top 4 users on Stack Overflow have between 14,000 and 31,000 posts each. Are they expected to update their answers and continue their high quality work?
Reviewing "outdated" posts is not feasible. As you mentioned, technology changes quickly. New versions are updated/released/patched constantly. There are other ways to indicating an answer is outdated.
- Post your own answer with updated information. Explain why you are posted to an old question by stating the current answer(s) are for version X and your new answer is for version Y.
- Add a comment to the outdated answer explaining why the answer is no longer accurate.
- Ask a new question, explaining that the previous question is not relevant to version Y. Explain why it is not relevant or risk a duplicate close vote.
- Down vote the answer. It'd be nice to post a comment explaining why you down voted, but certainly not necessary.