I've worked in training AI at a low level for over 10 years, I've worked on a range of voice assistant and visual recognition systems.
My own work has dropped off to a level that I'm pursuing other opportunities and have taken higher AI concept AI courses such as IMBs Introduction to AI, which is free and well worth doing as an introduction course. The reason is that AI can now reliably do a lot of the more mundane tasks that I was involved in itself. I helped train it do those roles knowing it wouldn't need human input after a certain point to do them.
AI hasn't peaked at all - at least in terms of its future capabilities and utility in many roles. AI's creative capabilities will eventually be indistinguishable from human created content, along with all the little human touches that currently make it easy to tell the difference. Writers will, and already have migrated to become more like digital editors. A human mind overseeing and editing everything to make sure it still makes sense.
What has likely peaked is any hysteria about AI being used everywhere and replacing a huge amount of jobs - it will replace many more, that's for sure, but any human interaction jobs are still mostly going to be fine.
A huge hurdle to mass acceptance of AI will be its use in the medical field. AI is already being used in nursing at a much lower cost than human staff. It might take a decade or two more, but there will very likely be highly effective AI doctors and counsellors, with human doctors themselves becoming more like patient managers overseeing multiple AI assistants and making any major decisions. Another landmark will be when AI voice assistants are consistently better than the average call centre worker, something not that far off either. Crystal clear accent of your choice with instant connection versus 30 min wait and indecipherable accent that costs 99% more to run as a business. It will likely take most call centre roles at some point.
So no, AI won't take all jobs, but it will take many, and it's not stopping. It's getting better all the time.
Robotics is also seeing great advances along with them being used on production lines for more complex tasks that humans used to do, along with AI is it going to have a significant impact. Universal income will likely be a required side effect of the major loss of jobs in years and decades to come.
I do use AI for certain things but not for any writing, so this post is at least AI free. At least it won't take our posts.