- All in Windows 11 are now obtaining a new function of ‘rewriting’ for notes
- It is being deployed now, although Microsoft has not officially announced this
- The capture is that you need a Microsoft 365 subscription to use functionality (beyond a very limited test in certain regions)
The application of Windows 11 notes is obtaining a rewriting capacity with AI, a characteristic previously seen in the tests, which is carried out by a new report.
Last Windows noticed the development, observing that in a strange way, Microsoft has not yet declared that the rewriting function with Chatgpt’s propulsion is not tested.
Rewrite does exactly what I would expect, using AI to rejigate any selected piece of text in the notebook (using several parameters that can be adjusted).
As noted, Microsoft’s official documentation still says that this functionality is in tests (in the channels and development channels for Windows 11), but in fact, it is being implemented in finished versions of the operating system.
The last launch of the full version of Blocepad (V11.2412.16.0) has the rewriting function, according to Windows Last, which takes it to all regions worldwide. It is also worth noting that when in the tests, this was a characteristic of the USA., So its deployment has progressed quickly here, to say the least.
How it works and the limitations of rewriting
Rewriting in the notes block works in a similar way to the other incarnations that this option could have seen with AI offered in (such as Word, or in fact co -pilot on the web).
Select some text, invoke the capacity and then the AI ββ(chatgpt in this case) will present a version of those sentences differently, based on certain options selected for tone, length and format. Then you can consult three possible versions of the rewriting and choose the one you prefer.
It is a relatively simple, but still useful implementation, of the text rewriting here, but with a remarkable capture: it cannot use rewriting without a Microsoft 365 subscription (and must be initiated to use the capacity, which has recently caused some confusion recently).
I say that you cannot use it without paying, but that is not strictly true, because as Windows Last points out, Rewrite works in a ‘credits’ payment system and in the United States and Canada, together with the United Kingdom, obtains a limited number of free credits. That limited amount is basically sufficient to advance how rewriting works.
Therefore, this is effectively a functionality of subscribers for the notes, although some may not want it, anyway. I have already covered the arguments about the notes that it suffers from feature film more and more, moving away the application of its traditional design as a small simplified text editor, and Rewrite will not help placate those who feel that Microsoft has lost course with this software.