“We set out to solve one of the most common frustrations we hear — finding and changing settings on your PC — using the power of AI agents,” Navjot Virk, corporate vice president of Windows Experiences at Microsoft, said in a blog post on Tuesday. “An agent uses on-device AI to understand your intent and with your permission, automate and execute tasks.”

  • bampop@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    I set up my pc as dual boot a few weeks back. Opened up windows yesterday, for the first time in a while, to export a few settings from thunderbird. Took about half an hour to get it started. Felt like popping round to the house of an abusive ex to pick up the last of my things.

  • SCmSTR@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    4 hours ago

    Holy shit.

    Your ux SUCKS SO MUCH, that instead of making it not shitty…

    You developed AI for it?

    Are you fucking kidding me

    How inept are these developers

  • Notso@lemm.ee
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    5 hours ago

    “Hey Copilot. Delete yourself, Recall and all other bloatware from my system. Thank you.”

  • FinishingDutch@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    Ah Christ. We’ve collectively regressed so much in computer knowledge that people can’t even find a settings menu? Even I have trouble believing that one.

    • endeavor@sopuli.xyz
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      2 hours ago

      kinda fair considering windows has like 20 control panels that should all do the same thing but at the end of the day you still need to use regedit.

    • smeenz@lemmy.nz
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      6 hours ago

      The last time finding settings in Windows was straight forward was Windows 95. Since the stupid dumbed down ‘settings’ app was vomited upon us, it has been nearly impossible to find the thing you know is there but has now been renamed and moved, and isn’t even indexed in the settings app search bar.

  • csm10495@sh.itjust.works
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    7 hours ago

    I actually like the ability for a local AI to help with this in theory. I don’t think it’s an excuse for unintuitive UIs though.

    • TeddE@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      I appreciate the sentiment - in fact it’s been fun watching AI being integrated into home assistant by end users and being given full control, lots of incredibly interesting times.

      But not all AI is the same. Somehow I expect that Microsoft’s implementation will make it ridiculously easy to opt-in to Microsoft services and relaxed privacy settings, but will leave opting out as an exercise left to the user.

    • Joelk111@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      Wow, a take that isn’t just “AI bad?” Wild.

      Yeah I thought it was weird that it couldn’t do this in windows in the first place when you had to click a button to allow the AI to change your computer from light to dark mode or something. It was right 99% of the time in my brief testing, and just include an undo button in case it isn’t.

      All of that said, I’m glad to be on Linux where there isn’t any AI built into my OS, but I’m also not the target audience for needing an AI to change my settings for me.

    • chunes@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      I agree but with Microsoft you know an air-gapped ‘AI agent’ is never going to happen.

    • TeddE@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      Worse - easy way to set the settings then gaslight the user to say they asked for it that way.

      How much you wanna bet that it makes those changes in a way that is generally indistinguishable from as if it was done by the user’s own credentials? (Except save perhaps in recall’s own logs)

  • The_Caretaker@lemm.ee
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    6 hours ago

    I dumped Windows about 18 months ago, before their recall and copilot BS. There are many Linux distros out there. They are free and there is almost nothing you can do with Windows that can’t be done on Linux. These days, most games for Windows can be played on Linux using Proton and Wine. There is no reason to keep Windows and plenty of reasons to dump Windows, like not wanting your personal data stolen or monitored by corporations and governments.

  • GalacticTaterTot@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    Maybe if you didn’t split settings into that half-baked settings app, then leave control panel in place with the remaining settings, but make control panel increasingly difficult to get to, we wouldn’t need a stupid AI agent to help us change settings.

    • thermal_shock@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      Yes! I really feel all this copilot bullshit is to hide the fact they released windows 11 broken as fuck and here 2.5 years later it’s still a pile of shit. It’s just fucked. I have to use it daily for work and clients and it’s done nothing but prepare me to install W10 LTSC this summer or move to Linux. Problem with Linux is a have an Nvidia GPU and don’t like having to fuck with that, otherwise Zorin it will be. Windows 11 pushes me everyday to hate it more and more. Seriously. Daily fucking updates for broken shit and shoving AI down our throats. Fuck windows.

        • The_Caretaker@lemm.ee
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          7 hours ago

          CachyOS rocks. I settled on it after trying many Linux distros and CachyOS won. All distros had pros and cons CachyOS was easy to update. Easy to install and remove programs without the terminal. Proton and Wine run great on it so most of my Steam and Epic games are playable and all media types play without tinkering. That was an issue with Fedora.

      • Phantom_Engineer@lemmy.ml
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        10 hours ago

        I’m in a similar situation, though I’ve already got a dual boot set up so it’s just a matter of only using Windows when I just absolutely have to.

        Earlier today, I tried to zip a directory on Windows 11 with the context menu, and it wouldn’t do it! It’s a feature that’s been in Windows forever and is even in Ubuntu, but somehow over at Microsoft they’ve managed to break it. Incredible.