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Microsoft launched Copilot+ PCs a year ago to mockery. Is the world finally ready for them?

Microsoft launched Copilot+ PCs a year ago to mockery. Is the world finally ready for them?

Fast Company20-05-2025
A year ago today, Microsoft unveiled what it believed would be the future of home computing. Copilot+ PCs, optimized to harness the power of AI, were introduced with the promise of revolutionizing how we interact with our laptops and desktops.
The reaction, however, was far from enthusiastic. Critics mocked the addition of an AI button on the keyboard, likening it to the redundant action keys from late-1990s PCs. More concerning was the backlash to Recall, a feature designed to continuously record user activity to provide smarter assistance. Many found the idea invasive. Public alarm grew when it became clear that Recall stored this data off-device, raising serious privacy concerns—particularly with sensitive tasks like entering bank details. The feature was eventually, well, recalled. 'Copilot+ PCs are finally here. You don't want one—yet,' read one scathing op-ed published in Computer World at the time.
Fast-forward a year, and the landscape has shifted. AI adoption continues to grow, and the once-ridiculed concept of agentic AI has gained traction. That shift in sentiment has helped normalize features like Recall, which quietly returned in the April 2025 Windows 11 update. This time, it's opt-in rather than opt-out, and stores screenshots locally instead of on the cloud.
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