Very excited to see not only higher resolution images of known objects but also all the unknown objects around and farther back in time that we previously couldn't see. Growing up with Hubble images we take for granted what people grew up with before that: virtually nothing accessible. Keep in mind Hubble images came around in the same time frame as the birth of mass use of the internet by non-academics and enterprise level stuff. We will now get JW images for the next 20 years that are on another technical level. It's too easy for today's social media user to simply look at JW's first color image released and just shrug their shoulders and move on. Today's culture isn't going to be stunned by images hardly at all--they are consuming millions of them per day as it is in sub-second time frames. The real excitement is the science that will then fuel future technology that people will benefit from (or die from) that we generate from new physics from the data from JW.
I'm a telescope nerd here on Earth. Wish I had access to such an instrument like JW. We have so much local that we are clueless about still. I primarily study and image our local star and from a `pretty picture' standpoint, I have two NASA APODs now just in solar. Happy to see more images from JW!
Very best,