Can you just make the start menu appear when I click it instead of several second later? Is that so much to ask?
Microsoft is turning Windows into an ‘agentic OS,’ starting with the taskbar
Submitted 1 week ago by nemeski@mander.xyz to windows@sopuli.xyz
https://www.theverge.com/news/821948/microsoft-windows-11-ai-agents-taskbar-integration
Comments
CompactFlax@discuss.tchncs.de 1 week ago
Dirk@lemmy.ml 1 week ago
Windows 11 is the biggest ad for Linux!
Bob_Robertson_IX@discuss.tchncs.de 1 week ago
I added Opencode to my Linux terminal and have it powered by Ollama and it has made my Linux computer even more amazing. I just tell it what I want it to do and it does it. It knows all of my servers, services, applications and scripts, has access to all of my config and data files. So when I tell it that I have some files stuck in the ‘download’ directory inside my ‘movies’ directory, I don’t have to tell it which computer that directory is located on or how to access it. I also don’t have to tell it that the files get into that directory using Radarr. So when I was having issues of my files not properly being moved from ‘download’ to ‘organized’ it could have just moved the files, which is what I was expecting… instead it looked at the config file for Radarr and suggested how I can fix it. That was pretty incredible.
Now, if Windows had done that using Copilot I wouldn’t be thrilled because that means that Microsoft has way too much knowledge about my personal network structure.
Adding agentic AI to the OS can be amazingly powerful, but it really should only be done with an LLM that you control.
Also, agentic AI is going to cause a LOT of problems because as great as my above example is, I later had an instance where I added several .docx files to my Opencode directory and asked it to convert the files to a format it can read (plain text) and then ingest the information from them. It did that, and then it wanted to delete the .docx files. I told it to leave the files alone and I’d delete them later. A couple of minutes later it again tried to delete those .docx files (it was literally trying to run the command ‘rm **/*.docx’, which I really don’t like it using wildcards with the rm command). So again, I told it not to, then I told it that I do not want it to ever remove any .docx files without my explicit permission. It apologized profusely… and then immediately tried to run the rm command again.
It’s a handy tool, but if you get lazy and let your guard down it’s going to bite you.
EpeeGnome@feddit.online 1 week ago
Seems like a situation where more energy needs to be put into preventing screwups than would have been spent just doing the job in the first place. If I hired a human assistant who made such a blatant mistake, and they then turned around and did the thing I just now explicitly told them not to, I would be thinking that they are clearly not cut out for that line of work, and continuing to employ them as an assistant would be foolish. But an “AI” agent does this, and it’s just “Oh, let’s keep trying. It just needs a better model. It just needs better prompts. You just need to watch out for its mistakes.” No thanks.
I mean, you sound like you’re happy using it, and I don’t want to tell you you’re wrong. From a technology design viewpoint, it is a fascinating use case. I just think that for a majority computer users this will only make computers even more frustrating and confusing than they already were.
jagermo@feddit.org 1 week ago
Thank you, no need.
Assassassin@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 week ago
People with the knowledge to make use of this either despise AI and will not use it or already have a preferred AI offering and will not care about this. The average PC user will have no clue what it is and will treat it like a search box if they notice at all.
Lumidaub@feddit.org 1 week ago
assistant in Windows that can go off and control your PC
But can it make the text on my screen larger?
baconmonsta@piefed.social 1 week ago
Looks great! I’m sure all the windows users are going to be happy
calliope@retrolemmy.com 1 week ago
Wtf are you talking about?
RustyShackleford@lemmy.zip 1 week ago
They realize they’ve made a huge turd burger, so now they need to get the less technology inclined users to eat it. So they add marketing terms like, “superpowers”.