No new technology is ready for mass consumption immediately. DVD players took over a decade to catch on with the public because 1) they were too damn expensive for the average person to buy at retail, and 2) most people were still married to the bucket seats at the local theater.
Change isn't about adopting new technology. The technology, in virtually every known case, is the vehicle to change. Cell phone usage required a shift in thinking about communications, but the technology itself wasn't the driver. People slowly began to realize that a phone could be more than just a phone. It could be an entertainment center and a multi-tool communication device rolled into one. Instead of just talking to people, you could text with them, watch videos, play games, listen to music, and a lot more. It's not just a phone anymore. It's an office you carry around in your pocket, with practical everyday uses. But many of the features you currently have on your phone came from customers asking for them. Originally, all you got was a phone that you had to flip open to use, and something they broke.
Web3 is on the horizon. If we're patient, it will be better 10 years from now than it is today, and more people will be using it.