A new category of AI-focused personal computers (PCs) will be called Copilot+PC, chief executive officer Satya Nadella said at an event Monday at Microsoft’s Redmond, Washington, campus.
Microsoft demonstrated a feature called Recall that is designed to help users find a buried browser tab, file, email or chat, based on conversational language prompts. It will be like “photographic memory,” said Yusuf Mehdi, Microsoft’s consumer chief marketing officer.
Microsoft is aiming to demonstrate that generative AI will revolutionise computing for regular consumers, not simply its corporate cloud customers.
Though the company embedded AI in its Bing search engine early on, Nadella has expressed frustration that Microsoft has not launched compelling consumer products more quickly, Bloomberg previously reported. To help rectify the situation, in March he hired DeepMind co-founder Mustafa Suleyman to oversee consumer AI efforts.
“The pursuit has always been about how to build computers that understand us, instead of us having to understand computers and I feel like we really are close to that real breakthrough,” Nadella said.
A live captions feature in Windows can translate any video content into English from 40 languages in real time. Because it is part of the operating system, the feature works on any conferencing or entertainment apps.
The company is also adding a new AI co-creator program that uses machine learning models to turn basic sketches into more complex images.
The Recall feature relies on several language models embedded into Windows and lets users set certain content as private so it cannot be archived by the AI software. More broadly, the features use a new layer of software called the Windows Copilot Runtime, made up of more than 40 AI models that can handle a variety of text, visual, audio and analysis tasks.
Their inclusion provides a lift to Qualcomm, which is betting its mobile phone technology is better suited to the next generation of AI-infused machines that consume more power.