this post was submitted on 07 May 2025
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"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."

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[–] taladar@sh.itjust.works 6 points 1 day ago

It feels like Microsoft is really going all in on this AI trend. Probably because they are well aware that they missed/were late to every major trend since the 90s (e.g. the Internet, music players, smart phones, gaming consoles,...) and they don't have that much to lose any more with Windows' inferiority becoming more and more apparent. So they are probably going for the high risk, high reward strategy where they will either lose the desktop OS market completely (in the likely case AI turns out to be just a regular hype cycle) or win big by being early (in the unlikely case that AI turns out to be much better than it looks like right now AND having expertise with this will help with better versions of this once they show up).

[–] rbos@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 day ago

Well, that's one way to create a murderous AI. I suddenly understand why Hal wanted to kill everyone. I would, too.

[–] rottingleaf@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

I don't like how computing was cool and clean internally, if a bit harsh, like in Star Wars EU or even Foundation (the Foundation would do dishonest things, probably on the track to our reality, but already less), and now it's becoming arcane, poisonous, messed up and oppressive like in Stargate SG-1. In the goauld part. Can we not be goauld slaves pls?..

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