I don't see any mention of any details about the study participants but I wouldn't expect the general public to have this attitude.
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It seems more like a niche thing that's useful for generating rough drafts or lists of ideas, but the results are hardly useable on their own and still require additional work to finesse them. In alot of ways, it reminds me of my days working on a production line with welding robots. Supposedly these robots could do hundreds/thousands of parts without making a mistake... BUT that was never the case and people always needed to double-check the robot's work (different tech, not "AI", just programmed movements, but similar-ish idea). By default, I just don't trust really anything branded as "AI", it still requires a human to look over what it's done, it's just doing a monotonous task and doing it faster than a person could, but you still can't trust what it gives you.
So AMD's "AI"-supporting CPUs are bound to flop now?
There was a study earlier (idk if it was posted here) that showed consumers are mainly interested in copilot± pcs for their battery life, not AI
My fridge has AI