- Another leader of Microsoft detailed their vision of a future window
- Pavan Davuluri, vice-president of Windows devices and devices, echoes the thoughts previously presented by Microsoft Vice-President for the safety of the operating system, David Weston
- The global vision is for more AI and an operating system that looks at what you do on the screen, typing in the cloud, which can fear privacy
Another leader of Microsoft has provided his vision of the future of Windows, specifically supervised around the AI and the Cloud, and how this entry – and the voice entrance – will be a large part of the operating system at the bottom.
Windows Central discovered a YouTube interview with Pavan Davuluri, Windows vice-president and devices at Microsoft. See the video clip below and be notified, the technobabble is strong with it. Davuluri said at some point: “Computer science [will] Become more ambient, more omnipresent, continue to expand on form factors and certainly become more multimodal in the arc of time. “”
Okay, let’s boil this – and the rest of the interview – a little. IT becoming more and more “multimodal” refers to the use of entries beyond the traditional mouse and keyboard, and the executive affects vocal controls as an important part of the equation. This echoes the vice-president of Microsoft for the safety of the operating system, David Weston, said earlier this month when he explains his Windows vision in 2030.
Davuluri also says: “Basically, the concept that your computer can really look at your screen and is aware of becoming an important modality for us in the future.”
Again, that follows what Weston observed about the new generation Windows PC to “see what we see, hear what we hear, and we can talk to him and ask him to do much more sophisticated things”.
The key idea seems to be Windows by looking at what you are doing, using AI to determine the context, then applying this to your actions in the operating system, and specifically making more useful voice commands because of this context.
Davuluri notes: “You can talk to your computer while you write, insert or interact with another person. You should be able to have a computer semantically understand your intention to interact with it.”
The executive also speaks that Windows becomes “increasingly agentic” (the first AI agent recently made its debut in the parameters application in Windows 11, of course), and how the cloud will be necessary to supply these AI capacities. (Although some work is on the device, he already indicates, as we already see with Copilot + PCS – Hence the need for NPU with these laptops.)
Davuluri observes: “The calculation will become omnipresent, as in Windows, the experiments will use a combination of local capacities [processed on the device] And who are in the cloud. I think it is our responsibility to ensure that they are transparent for our customers. “”
This is a way to say that the level of treatment necessary for some of these AI powers in new generation windows will have to press the cloud to guarantee that performance remains reactive enough to feel “transparent” rather than slow.
Analysis: a computer paradise – or a Big Brother nightmare?
Microsoft clearly has a hymn leaf somewhere, because its high -level leaders seem to sing the same song concerning the evolution of Windows as we head for the next decade.
It is interesting to resume the points in mirror between these two interviews that Microsoft recently presented: more AI (surprise, surprise) which determines the context by looking at what you do on the screen, and also allows vocal controls to be used more effectively according to this context – with the cloud at least in part.
Depending on the type of person you are, it may look like a fascinating new path in terms of facilitating what you need to do in Windows or a confidentiality nightmare.
Windows more paranoid users are likely to be horrified by the suggestions made on the future of the operating system here. An operating system that looks at what you do? The way they read this Microsoft angle is that it transforms the windows into a surveillance platform powered by AI – you can guarantee it.
And it is obvious where such concerns come from when it is said that “the computer can really look at your screen” and take the context from there, and take advantage of the cloud (read: the private servers of Microsoft) to crunch the data on what you do with your PC.
If that makes the use of new generation windows a breeze and the AI constantly draws the applications you need, or the research you want to do, before accessing it, or proactively suggesting files that you may want the following options – or Windows which could be modified for your advantage in given scenarios – will people cloud? Frankly, the truth is that they probably won’t do so if it makes their computer life a lot.