Microsoft’s latest Windows Insider blog post states that while testing new Copilot features in Windows 11, “we have decided to pause the rollout of these experiences to further refine them based on user feedback.” For those who already have the feature, ” Copilot in Windows will continue to work as expected, and we will continue to develop new ideas with Windows Insiders.”
We’re looking forward to seeing new Surface laptops powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Elite processors, which run Windows on Arm and compete with Apple’s M3-powered MacBook Air. Meanwhile, new features for Windows are expected to include an AI Explorer app that, similar to the old Windows 10 Timeline feature, can remember what you are doing and allow users to pick up tasks across different devices and play “every The idea of a personal co-pilot.
Copilot features that Microsoft recently tested in preview include Copilot taskbar icons that animate to show when an artificial intelligence assistant is available to provide assistance. You can then hover over the icon to see your options, such as getting an AI-generated text summary.
Another feature allows Copilot in Windows to pop up from the sidebar into a normal application window, which the user can resize and move. This feature started rolling out to the Canary channel in March.
The new version released to the Dev and Beta channels includes a fix for Copilot unexpectedly starting automatically after a reboot. There is also a new shortcut in the right-click menu of a tab in File Explorer that allows users to copy the current tab. But the big takeaway for those who keep an eye on Task Manager is that Microsoft has updated the units to correctly reflect memory speeds, moving from last year’s MHz to DDR-enabled MT/s counts.