Microsoft Introduces ‘Copilot+ PCs’
Microsoft today held an event on the eve of their Build developer conference to introduce their new “AI first” class of PCs, which they’re calling Copilot+ PCs. The event video is not on YouTube (yet?), and the URL (https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/event) is not a permalink.
The most notable new Windows feature is Recall (which conceptually seems much like Rewind, which has been available as a third-party app for MacOS for a while now):
We set out to solve one of the most frustrating problems we
encounter daily — finding something we know we have seen before
on our PC. Today, we must remember what file folder it was stored
in, what website it was on, or scroll through hundreds of emails
trying to find it.
Now with Recall, you can access virtually what you have seen or
done on your PC in a way that feels like having photographic
memory. Copilot+ PCs organize information like we do — based on
relationships and associations unique to each of our individual
experiences. This helps you remember things you may have forgotten
so you can find what you’re looking for quickly and intuitively by
simply using the cues you remember. […]
Recall leverages your personal semantic index, built and stored
entirely on your device. Your snapshots are yours; they stay
locally on your PC. You can delete individual snapshots, adjust
and delete ranges of time in Settings, or pause at any point right
from the icon in the System Tray on your Taskbar. You can also
filter apps and websites from ever being saved. You are always in
control with privacy you can trust.
Recall can “view” and remember everything that appears on screen because it’s integrated with the Windows 11 graphics system. That’s the sort of “AI feature” that truly benefits from being a first-party solution that can integrate at lower levels of the OS than third-party apps can.
One of the more impressive demos they showed was using Copilot as a voice-driven assistant that helps you cooperatively play Minecraft. The game still gets the entire GPU for graphics because Copilot is running on the NPU.
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Microsoft today held an event on the eve of their Build developer conference to introduce their new “AI first” class of PCs, which they’re calling Copilot+ PCs. The event video is not on YouTube (yet?), and the URL (https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/event) is not a permalink.
The most notable new Windows feature is Recall (which conceptually seems much like Rewind, which has been available as a third-party app for MacOS for a while now):
We set out to solve one of the most frustrating problems we
encounter daily — finding something we know we have seen before
on our PC. Today, we must remember what file folder it was stored
in, what website it was on, or scroll through hundreds of emails
trying to find it.
Now with Recall, you can access virtually what you have seen or
done on your PC in a way that feels like having photographic
memory. Copilot+ PCs organize information like we do — based on
relationships and associations unique to each of our individual
experiences. This helps you remember things you may have forgotten
so you can find what you’re looking for quickly and intuitively by
simply using the cues you remember. […]
Recall leverages your personal semantic index, built and stored
entirely on your device. Your snapshots are yours; they stay
locally on your PC. You can delete individual snapshots, adjust
and delete ranges of time in Settings, or pause at any point right
from the icon in the System Tray on your Taskbar. You can also
filter apps and websites from ever being saved. You are always in
control with privacy you can trust.
Recall can “view” and remember everything that appears on screen because it’s integrated with the Windows 11 graphics system. That’s the sort of “AI feature” that truly benefits from being a first-party solution that can integrate at lower levels of the OS than third-party apps can.
One of the more impressive demos they showed was using Copilot as a voice-driven assistant that helps you cooperatively play Minecraft. The game still gets the entire GPU for graphics because Copilot is running on the NPU.