There was the opportunity to test Copilot in Windows 11, although in Europe its deployment had not even started through any version for Windows Insiders. After a multi-million dollar investment in OpenAI, now Microsoft slows down the deployment of Copilot in the latest version of its popular operating system.
Since the arrival of OpenAI with ChatGPTMicrosoft was one of the tech giants that was quickest to introduce the benefits of artificial intelligence through the conversion of Bing to Copilot or the development of it in Windows 11. The AI opportunity from Microsoft It has not been wasted, although now it wants to go at a different pace.
Just after announcing that Bing surpassed 140 million daily active users, now it’s time to slow down Microsoft Copilot in Windows 11. And all because Advances in Generative Artificial Intelligence Spark All Kinds of Opinionsboth positive and negative.
And for users who have the option to use Microsoft Copilot in Windows 11 It’s also not about that innovative experience that they use every day. This is precisely one of the reasons why Microsoft stopped the progress of Copilot in Windows as we can read in the latest version of Windows 11 Insider Preview.
Microsoft specifies that In recent months, he has tried different Copilot experiments on Windows (Preview) with Windows Insiders via the Canary, Dev and Beta channels. Some of these experiments included making Copilot on Windows act like a standard application and an icon on the taskbar with an animation to indicate that Copilot can help copy text or images.
Microsoft’s decision ultimately remains in force suspend deployments of these experiments to perfect them according to user feedback. In fact, according to Windows Centralmaintains that Copilot on Windows will continue to work as expected while continuing to improve with new ideas from Windows Insiders.
It’s surprising that for the first time Microsoft is taking a break to consider the deployment of generative artificial intelligence from another angle when it seemed that it was literally going to “eat” Windows. It will surely be for the better and for it to really improve the Windows user experience and be useful for everyday life.