It's clear that "AI" is being shoved into everything even vaguely technical these days. Every web app gets a new little magic wand icon to convert a pithy high-signal sentence into 7 bland high-noise sentences, or a Mona Lisa icon to more easily insert DALL-E images into your chats, spreadsheets, and fast food orders.
For me personally, as someone who uses LLMs daily for research and learning - and who has hooked LLM APIs to REPLs, my filesystem, made dozens of little specialized tools - I still barely ever use anything beyond the basic ChatGPT style interface. Smarter models help, and while I dabble with a menagerie of local LLMs I find myself still gravitating to OpenAIs flagship models, especially with the price drops of 4-turbo and 4o.
Anyway all that to ask - pardon my French - is there a world of consumers I'm not seeing that gives a flying shit about all these magic wand and Mona Lisa icons? Not talking about TechCrunch or the business press, or shareholders speculating on the impact of Google Gemini 1.6 Gamma Multimodal LabelMaker 6-Sigma Assistant, but actual everyday users?
Is this all a crazy FOMO gold rush set off by the phenomenal uptake of ChatGPT a few years ago?
What recent AI products beside ChatGPT-style QA and diffusion image generation (and github copilot for developers) have made an impact on the average person's heart and mind, and seen a lot of adoption and enthusiasm?
As a tech-literate user of the basic ChatGPT interface for the occasional coding assistance in an language or framework that I'm unfamiliar with, I pretty much *never* use it elsewhere. Nor do I miss it or wish it was integrated.
I see very few people asking for it to added, and plenty more people asking how to remove it where it was added.
I used a little image generation, but the process of trying to get an LLM to edit a generated image via a text interface is more work than it's worth.