Yebbut one system suits all, i.e. full sheets of wet n dry on a big enough plate. This for remedial work only not for routine sharpening.
But they do wear out, as oil stones don't, which typically can last for life, as long as you don't spend hours pointlessly flattening them.
Waste of time. I never flatten sharpening stones - if you spread the work they stay flat enough for life. A bit of a dip length-ways is no problem and a hollow across is OK as most plane blades need a camber anyway.
I occasionally freshen one up with a 3m diapad to remove clogged up surface, embedded wire edges etc.
I had one 2nd hand Norton "0" combination stone with a deep hollow lengthways on the coarse side which must have been done with regular axe sharpening or similar, and in fact I found perfect for axe sharpening! The fine side was rounded over very slightly which made a change from hollowed out. Didn't realise this at first until it started showing up on plane blades. No prob, just have to change the technique slightly to get a camber instead.
My basic opinion of modern sharpening is that it is grossly over thought and is much easier done almost head-down-brain-off, with no fancy gear