Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

Not everyone is using AI for everything

read original get AI Assistant for Productivity → more articles
Why This Matters

Despite widespread media coverage suggesting that AI is becoming ubiquitous, actual usage remains limited to a minority of users, particularly among younger generations like Gen Z. This indicates that AI adoption is more gradual and uneven than often portrayed, highlighting the importance of understanding real-world engagement rather than hype. For the tech industry and consumers, this underscores the need for realistic expectations and targeted strategies to increase adoption and address concerns around AI use.

Key Takeaways

Last year around this time The New York Times Magazine ran an A.I. issue with an introduction titled “Everyone Is Using A.I. for Everything. Is That Bad?” It’s an edited transcript from the Hard Fork podcast, which I think assumes two things are true that are turning out to be false.

Once you’ve tried AI, you use it “for everything.” No, in fact most people who’ve tried it are just occasional AI users. AI has gotten so good that despite any misgivings, “everyone is using A.I.” No, in fact large chunks of the population aren’t using AI at all.

(It isn’t really strictly defined in the article, but I’m taking AI to mean generative AI accessible via a chat interface.)

“ Everyone is using AI for everything ” is actually “ Some people are using AI for some things ”

Take Gen Z, where AI awareness is the highest: in the last year, even though AI has supposedly gotten a lot better, Gen Z AI adoption has all but stalled, with a meaningful percentage of the Gen Z population still using AI rarely, if at all.

Here’s Gallup’s year-over-year (2025/2026) breakdown:

79/81% use AI at least rarely

41/42% are anxious about AI

32/31% use AI only monthly/every few months

22/31% are angry about AI

... continue reading