Assuming it gets to the theoretical speeds. Also assuming it's legit just a straight shot, which means centralized transportation hubs that may be out of the way of someone's normal commute, so they're still commuting to the out of the way transportation hub. If it has stops like traditional commuter trains etc. then it's completely pointless.
Because even if the direct transit on hyperloop may be super fast, getting to/from both the departure/arrival hubs may end up functionally adding back on most of the commute time anyways. At best, it's a functional super-expensive and theoretically-faster version of commuter trains.
Again, great theoretical applications and in perfect worlds where you can easily get to/from stations to home/work it'd save mountains of time. But given the state of infrastructure and population densities in the US, I wonder how practical it would even be as a commuter train compared to less expensive options.