Microsoft apparently doesn’t know what to do with itself, at least as far as Copilot, AI, and Windows are concerned. Recent reports suggest that Microsoft is backing away from more AI in Windows 11.
The past two years have seen a huge push by Microsoft to incorporate its Copilot AI into Windows, starting with Copilot+ PCs in 2024. But recent data shows that Copilot+ PCs are a bust. Microsoft seems to know this and has started pivoting away from all that. In fact, while Microsoft once said that every Windows 11 PC will be an AI PC, the company appears to finally see the writing on the wall.
According to Windows Central, Microsoft isn’t just scaling back on Copilot AI integration in Windows, but even moving to “reduce AI bloat across the operating system”:
Originally announced in 2024, Microsoft’s plan to integrate Copilot across various areas of the Windows 11 shell has been shelved as the company reevaluates its AI approach in the OS.
A Microsoft spokesperson commented:
Our approach to product development is to preview with customers and evolve with feedback. Some experiences we may preview privately and update before rolling out more broadly, while others we may preview and iterate publicly with feedback from Windows Insiders. In both of these cases, features may change, be removed, or replaced over time as we gather input from customers.
Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you know as well as I do that people just don’t like Copilot. In the past, Microsoft’s social media pushes for Copilot have sparked backlash, with many voicing what we’re mostly all feeling: “No one asked for this!”
And it seems Microsoft is finally listening. The stubborn forcing of Copilot down the throats of Windows users has (perhaps permanently) damaged the operating system’s reputation, to the point where we’re now even saying that Microsoft Copilot is the new Internet Explorer.
Can this shift in strategy repair that damage? What would it take to rebuild Windows’ status as the world’s leading OS? Or is it too little, too late? Time will tell. But if you ask me, Microsoft will need to do even more soul-searching and re-commit itself to a clean user experience that puts control back in the users’ hands if it wants our trust again.
Further reading: Tired of AI in Windows? Here’s how to get rid of it



