- Microsoft is launching an update for the Copilot application
- Change the home page to be more like the start menu
- The deployment is running, but it can take some Windows 11 users for some time
Microsoft is changing the Copilot application in Windows 11 to present to the user an experience such as the start menu, instead of the current home page based on the chat.
Windows reports that a new update for the Copilot application, which is currently being implemented to all Windows 11 users through the Microsoft store, applies a substantial image change to the home page for the AI assistant (as seen in the tests previously).
There is currently a chat style interface where your written consultation is central, as is the web version of Copilot (as shown in the image above), but the new application transforms the home page into something more similar to the start menu (see the image below).
As the last of Windows points out, he still gets the greeting of Copilot and the key consultation box (Chat), but now there are four new panels that adorn the screen that provides several extras.
These include links to return directly to the files that you have recently used, as well as the conversations with the co -pilot you have had in the past, which can rekindle if you wish.
Another panel offers the ability to ‘work on co -driver pages’ that allow working on writing and coding projects (which require abundant editions and reviews), and a fourth panel offers guided help with applications. The latter initiates a co -pilot vision session with the application in question, providing advice and advice on how to use the application.
The latest references also discovered from Windows that suggest that the agent with Chatgpt’s Copilot propulsion is reaching the AI application in Windows 11. The agent offers the ability to carry out certain tasks for you, such as the reserve of travel tickets, and the technology site believes that it could reach the next update for the Copilot application (add convenient for adequately).
Analysis: The beginning of a greater change?
As noted, all this has previously been seen in the tests, but apparently now it is being implemented in its entirety. That said, the deployment is a continuous process, and not everyone will see the new home page for the Copilot application at this time: it will take time to filter all PCs with Windows 11.
The broad idea here is to hook the tentacles of the Copilot application in more than Windows 11. In other words, Microsoft goes beyond simple AI consultations with the application and integrating more than you might need to do in the operating system. So, for example, you can click on a document marked in the recently used file panel of the Copilot application, and shoot it in word on the desktop.
Okay, the new application’s home page is not all That, like the start menu, but can see it by taking signs of that central part of the Windows 11 interface, and that raises an interesting perspective. At this time, we are seeing an initial menu style design in the Copilot application; But in the future, will that idea be turned? With what I mean: will we see a start menu that is based completely on co -pilot AI?
If we take the infusion of AI in Windows 11, which is happening clearly, until its logical conclusion, Copilot will reach everywhere, and the start menu can end up looking for something like this new version of the Copilot application. It will focus on consultations (including local searches) promoted by AI, and will offer not only quick access to their applications, but also help with them, and we can also expect Copilot’s recommendations to Power. (Maybe that will make the latter more useful; or maybe not, and they will continue to be a vehicle for the Borden of Microsoft’s insults).
This feels like an obvious path for Microsoft, so perhaps with this redesign of the co -ilot application, we have just seen our first glance of the future of the start menu in Windows 12 (or as the next generation operating system ends that ends up calling). Or maybe this thing will explode (but you don’t believe that more than me, right?).