I'm guessing the reason they did all the barge landings was to avoid possible incidents when landings go wrong, so now they've proven they can do a barge landing the government and safety regulators are all going, "Yeah, go ahead and land on US soil, you got this."
This is all amazing. Once we get to the point where they can do a launch a day we will start to see things like satellite phone and internet that's as cheap as cell phones (though still greater lag - can't beat the speed of light), and regular space tourism that while expensive isn't the millions of dollars that it would be today.
Launching regular robotic missions to planets and for other science missions will be cheaper, and we will be significantly closer to being able to send people to places further than the moon.
I'm not happy about the regular reductions in NASA budget, but I'm so pleased that the commercial sector is stepping up to the plate, and that Spacex is really making JPL, Boeing and others compete for contracts.