Microsoft rolls back some of its Copilot AI bloat on Windows
” Its goal, he explained, is to focus on AI experiences that are “genuinely useful.
This is not the first time Microsoft has rethought its Copilot integrations.
This, the site said, included some system-level integrations within the Settings app, File Explorer, and elsewhere. Before this, Microsoft had delayed the launch of its AI-powered memory feature, Windows Recall for Copilot + PCs, for over a year as it tried to address users’ privacy concerns.
The Recall feature launched last April, but security vulnerabilities are still being discovered.
It’s clear that user feedback is influencing Microsoft’s moves around AI on Windows.
Davuluri wrote that he and his team have spent the past several months listening to the community about how they’d like to see Windows improved.
The Copilot rollback is just one of the changes being made.
The company said it’s also introducing the ability to move the taskbar to the top or sides of the screen, giving users more control over system updates, speeding up File Explorer, improving the Widgets experience, updating the Feedback Hub, and making it easier to navigate its Windows Insider Program — a community that offers feedback about Windows’ future
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