I don't think the uptake of LLMs by non-technical people has been that dramatic. Nobody in my familial or social circles (which spans doctors, lawyers, artists, waitresses, etc.) has really mentioned them outside of asking my what I think about them.
As for what I think about them: I've been impressed with some aspects of code generation, but nothing else has really "wowed" me. Prose written with the various GPT models has an insincere quality that's impossible to overlook; AI-generated art tends to look glossy and overproduced in the same way that makes CGI-heavy movies hard to watch. I have not found that my Google Search experience was made better by their AI experiments; it made it harder, not easier, for me to find things.
While I absolutely agree that many movies over-use CGI, even with the relative decline in superhero movies, CGI-heavy movies still top the box office. Going over the list of highest-grossing movies each year [0], you have to go back about three decades to find a movie that isn't CGI-heavy, so apparently they're not that difficult for the general public to watch.
True. It's also a rude reality that much of the US uses word art and comic sans to advertise things, so I might just be a snob. Then again, impressing the snobs is a relevant part of the mass adoption curve :-)
As for what I think about them: I've been impressed with some aspects of code generation, but nothing else has really "wowed" me. Prose written with the various GPT models has an insincere quality that's impossible to overlook; AI-generated art tends to look glossy and overproduced in the same way that makes CGI-heavy movies hard to watch. I have not found that my Google Search experience was made better by their AI experiments; it made it harder, not easier, for me to find things.