A few days ago, Davuluri shared his excitement about it on his official X handle. He seemed very eager to reveal what the company has in mind at the upcoming Ignite event regarding the agentic OS plans.

Unfortunately for Microsoft and Davuluri, the response has been overwhelmingly negative, so much so that the comments on that X post have now been disabled.

Made me laugh. :)

  • feinstruktur@lemmy.ml
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    1 minute ago

    I wonder when the big software players running their stuff on Win are going to complain. For me, I’m tied to Autodesk. If they would make their mind up and start a Linux version or support Proton (I don’t see, why the advancement in the gaming world couldn’t in principle be applied to productivity software) I would be away from MS at work instantly.

  • Tattorack@lemmy.world
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    22 minutes ago

    MCP?

    They’re calling it the MCP?

    Did they do that on purpose, or are they really so small, soft, uncultured, and tone deaf at Microsoft? It’s… Probably the latter, isn’t it…

  • SaraTonin@lemmy.world
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    24 minutes ago

    Here’s the thing - the same thing that Microsoft is being roasted for saying they’re going to implement is the thing that Apple are being roasted for not having implemented yet. The difference is -rightly or wrongly- people trust Apple in a way that they simply don’t Microsoft.

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    1 hour ago

    I wiped my Windows SSD after over half a year of not booting into it at all. I do not miss it, but I do greatly appreciate a larger /home partition spanning an entire 1 TB SSD (for reasons of buying at various times for projects that didn’t need a lot of storage, I have 3 1 TB SSDs lol). Now to figure out how to enlarge the / partition with btrfs.

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    4 hours ago

    Unfortunately, most Windows users have a long history of complaining about it and then still continuing to use it.

    There’s no way around it: if you keep using abusive software, you’ll stay in an abusive relationship.

  • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    Sorry for being an idiot, but what is an agentic OS?

    Whatever it is, it sounds fucking stupid.

    The OS doesnt need to be a focus. the OS is best when you completely forget its existence and can just do things without worry.

    Which is why Windows 7 is the best operating system microsoft has, and seemingly will, ever produce.

    • null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      12 minutes ago

      This is really just a guess but… I think “agent” in this context means a personalised AI.

      Training gen AI models requires huge amounts of resources. Its not practical to train an AI for your personal use.

      Creating an agent is something like, taking an existing model, asking it to keep your entire browser history in mind while you ask it to do your homework.

      IMO its actually one of the big limitations of gen AI, but somehow the word is supposed to mean the opposite. As in, the current approach has reached a dead end requiring exponentially more resources for less and less improvement. So because we can’t make a model that just knows or learns everything, we have to make agents that know lots about specific things.

    • chillpanzee@lemmy.ml
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      4 hours ago

      Sorry for being an idiot, but what is an agentic OS?

      Agentic OS is a buzzword that’s meant to imply that the OS is (or has) an AI agent doing useful things for you in the background without you explicitly asking it to do those things (ie an agent working for you). For an agent to be useful, (they say) it has to know and learn everything it can about you, your life, your friends, activities, contacts, work, and so on.

      The tradeoff is pretty extreme though. Everything you do on the PC is watched, analyzed, catalogued, and retained by MIcrosoft (and possibly whoever they choose to share the info with, which is likely every government that asks). The features that do this are generically called client-side scanning and Microsoft has a few specific variants you can read about called Copilot Recall, and Copilot Vision.

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        1 hour ago

        And in the non-Windows world - this could all be implemented on Linux in such a way that you, the end user choose if you want it at all, which models you want (including both local and online ones), and what gets what access. Plus all kinds of customizability. I’m sure someone is already working on this too.

      • Halcyon@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 hour ago

        As far as I can see MS is planning the agent not to stay in the background as you described but to be an active means to control the operating system and software functions, so that many tasks can be instructed in natural language.

      • 𝕛𝕨𝕞-𝕕𝕖𝕧@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        big tech doesn’t have a monopoly on linear algebra or calculus.

        you can run your own telemetry, analytics, and modeling pipelines with existing toolings and most modern PCs are plenty capable of doing a wide variety of useful things with said data.

        these tools are very powerful. algorithmic feeds regularly hijack your dopamine response whether you’re aware of it or not. these organizations colonize your mind. your consent or acknowledgment is not a necessary factor. why should MS, Google, and Meta be the sole masters of these feedback loops?

        the old privacy is dead. going into the future people should be pragmatic and actually do something about the current state of our society instead of being whiny do-nothing pissbabies complaining endlessly about things they barely comprehend. the answer to breaking our chains is understanding the very tools that oppress us all.

        being as tech-illiterate, as philosophically-illiterate as most people are is why we’re in the precarious position we’re in… one where these big tech empires have risen to institutional scales, rivaling nation-states themselves. and that includes the average software developer, sysadmin, IT support, doctor, engineer etc. not even considering genAI or agentic tools - we’re in a new zeitgeist where solving highly-dimensional problems is in extreme demand with very, very few people actually educated enough to do it. we don’t need more experts, those are a dime a dozen. we need renaissance men.

        do you people not see what is at stake here?

        you’re a boiling frog, all of you, all of us.

        one day you will wake up a citizen of meta and purchase your rations with facebook scrip, and you won’t even know it’s happened.

        the decisions we all collectively take now over the next 5-10 years determine whether free society survives or if we descend into a new dark age of neo-serfdom and techno-feudalism.

        may god have mercy on us all.

      • Joe@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        They should call this version of the OS “Doors” then, as it just shows you what doors it wants, and closes it’s door in your face if you don’t stump up your precious data.

    • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      Windows 10 had a better kernel than 7. Unfortunately, that kernel was packaged with the rest of windows 10.

    • Evotech@lemmy.world
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      Agent work can be pretty magical. I’ve been using cursor recently and the fact that it can just execute commands on your PC means you can just tell it to do something and it does. Troubleshooting as it goes

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      2 hours ago

      The thing is, they all invested so much into Ai now so they have to use it everywhere even when people dont want it… :)

      Its going to wreck the reputation of windows even more…

    • InFerNo@lemmy.ml
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      2 hours ago

      “Linux and Mac are toxic this year”

      Wat. Toxic how? Why this year?

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    8 hours ago

    What I see time and time again are people saying “I HAVE TO use Windows at work, but I don’t use it at home”.

    So, logically that means Windows is losing market share to Mac and Linux, right?

    Well, no. What I see over the past 20 years is that people just stopped buying PCs for personal use.

    At this point, it really feels like if you’re over 55, you’re in the minority if you own a PC. If you’re younger than 30, you’re in the minority if you own a PC.

    And for 30-55 year olds, it’s simple. You grew up with PCs, so you’re used to them. Everyone else just sees it as “that thing we use at work”

    So, no. People dropping microsoft from their own personal lives doesn’t mean they switch to linux. It just means they use their cell phone or tablet to browse the web. Because for most people, thats all a pc is anyways. Just a machine to browse the web on.

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      PC gamers under 30 would be considered a significant minority compared to other <30yos?

      Hmm… I don’t know. 30-50yos are raising kids right now. That’s a whole lot of 0-21orso year olds living in the bracket where people have PCs.

      Then you have college students filling the gap, who likely have a laptop at least.

    • Surp@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      Definitely not to mac…I use mac and windows at work and Mac is by far the worst OS. It’s so damn locked down it’s obnoxious.

      • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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        8 hours ago

        Funny thing is that is not likely. The shareholders of microsoft (and most blue chip companies) have not really asked for anything other then endless profits lately. This endless drive into shit seems to be almost entirely driven by weird sales pitches and executives chasing a sunk cost.

          • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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            4 hours ago

            Ha, like 5% of the time. Most of the time its cluster fuck after cluster fuck and visits from the good idea fairies.

            Not saying there should not be innovation, but innovation for nothing but to be able to say you are doing innovation is a cancer.

            • frongt@lemmy.zip
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              3 hours ago

              Yes, that’s why I wrote “innovation” and not innovation. I’m not sure if there’s something that better communicates the Dr. Evil air quotes.

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    8 hours ago

    Shit like this is why whenever companies say they’re “customer focused” I say they’re full of shit.

    No one wants this but M$ has so much investment tied into this that they need to make people want this.

    • ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      Oh, they’re customer focused, alright: focused on scraping customer data via the installed OS to feed to their AI and then aggregate for sale to other data brokers and/or interested governments.

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    9 hours ago

    I have some aging hardware (approaching 10 year old desktop PC) and I switched to Linux. I have to still use Windows at work but none of my personal computers are Windows anymore.

    Microsoft can go kick rocks.

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    12 hours ago

    They’ve really painted themselves into a corner with their AI investments. It’s starting to look like the total addressable market is a small fraction of what they’d need to break even on their atrociously ill-advised investments into the sector, and now they’re becoming increasingly desperate to shoehorn a technology that nobody wants into everything they can.

    Literally everybody who has an inkling of an idea of what’s going on in the AI space knows how this ends, but somehow the board and c-staff at MSFT are not counted amongst the inkling havers. In a few years they’re going to have to write off countless billions that they’ve wasted on this idiocy and nobody will be surprised but them.

    • nova_ad_vitum@lemmy.ca
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      10 hours ago

      Apparently when Satya Nadella took over, Steve Ballmer told him “don’t screw up”. In terms of stock price and profits, he absolutely hasn’t. In terms of producing products that consumers might actually want to pay for, he has failed completely and Microsoft has never been in a worse position. But those two things are completely disconnected now so it’s fine.

      Why have windows calculator when you can have windows calculator with AI guess what you want to calculate, get it wrong, spy on you, and use that spying to serve you targetted ads all at the same time? #innovation

      • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        Why have windows calculator when you can have windows calculator guess what you want to calculate, get it wrong, spy on you, and use that spying to serve you targetted ads all at the same time? #innovation

        Ya know, I’m not a linux “supporter” in the traditional sense. I usually find it annoying when people hijack these threads to say they use linux.

        But man…even though I don’t have a clue what I’m doing in linux, I’d rather be on linux than windows 11.

        • mrcleanup@lemmy.world
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          11 hours ago

          We have passed the point where it has to be complicated. If you choose something like Garuda, Bazzite, or Mint, it should be a pretty straightforward switch.

            • skribe@piefed.social
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              2 hours ago

              Except all those times where you learnt how to do something when you set it up years ago, and haven’t touched it since because it just bloody works. Then when you need to upgrade to a new machine you have to learn it all again.

              Been using Linux for thirty years and it still happens.

              • Valmond@lemmy.world
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                1 hour ago

                You would have known it better under windows as it would have bacame obsolete or just stopped working every other 6 months, needing your attention 😁

            • ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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              7 hours ago

              Zorin is working out really well for me, esp on my older machines with slower processors and less RAM that choke a little on fuller distros. I enjoy the KDE Plasma distros, for example, but they’re a little too heavy for my older boxes and I was getting a lot of video stutter and unexplained shutdows, etc. I don’t get that with Zorin or Mint. For me Mint works just as well as Zorin and picks up all my hardware just as handily, it just feels a little basic for what I’m used to. But Zorin hits just right in every direction for my needs. It’s a good distro for Windows noobs, that’s for sure.

              • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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                7 hours ago

                I still get freezes. Then when I try to power off and power back on, it won’t boot. Then a day or two will go by, and it boots.

                • ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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                  6 hours ago

                  Just for clarity, when you say it won’t boot, where in the boot process does it fail? Do you get as far as loading the BIOS, do you get a little way into the OS and then it crashes, or does it just not start at all?

                  I ask because depending on how far it gets into the boot process, you may not be looking at a software problem at all. Generally speaking, you have to get past the BIOS and into the bootloader before assuming the problem has to do with your choice of OS.

        • cygnus@lemmy.ca
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          11 hours ago

          It’s OK, you’re on Lemmy, we all use Linux here so you’re among friends (or bitter enemies if your distro of choice is Ubuntu)

        • nova_ad_vitum@lemmy.ca
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          9 hours ago

          A good low (basically zero) risk way to start is to flash an image of say Ubuntu onto a flash drive. They’re usually bootable. So you can boot into Linux right off the flash drive.

          This obvious takes a performance hit compared to actually installing it, but it’ll let you confirm that it actually works on your hardware.

          • Valmond@lemmy.world
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            1 hour ago

            And IIRC you xan choose to just keep it (so install it) right from there.

            You can also load it up, and then do wild stuff and install, upgrade things (which will disappear ofc.).

            That USB boot is crazy cool if you think about it IMO.

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      11 hours ago

      The way I see it, they think GenAI is the new portal to information, the way search has been for the last 25-30 years. They want to control that portal, because it’s worth trillions over time.

      This is why they’re cramming it into everything and worrying about use cases later. It’s a land grab.

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      12 hours ago

      It has been glorious watching Microsoft do this, they deserve this dead end and much worse honestly.

      I mean… I don’t know I guess it gives me hope how incompetent the people at the top of Microsoft truly seem to be?

    • Poem_for_your_sprog@lemmy.world
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      What do you mean people don’t want machine learning chatbots spewing out bullshit in every facet of their lives and technology use?

      We really need to get rid of the “AI” buzzword and refer to machine learning chatbots as what they are.

    • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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      last windows install in my house was on my rarely used laptop, windows 10.

      As soon as Win10 was end of life I threw linux on it. First time in…god…30 years? Theres not been a windows PC in my house… Ran Windows from 3.11 all the way up to 7 happily (and then my laptop came with Win 10 from factory and, well, thankfully I only had to use it when traveling… )

      Main system has mostly been a breeze a breeze for years now, but I built it with Linux in mind and picked AMD parts and such to make the transition easier.

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    I’m getting the feeling that most people wouldn’t hate AI so much if it wasn’t: 1. Built of the labor of let’s without fair compensation, and 2. Wasn’t a privacy nightmare. I think people would be okay with it even in spite of the energy usage because that’s something that can be optimized over time. But these other points are systemic societal issues that the current approach to AI entrenches.

    • rumba@lemmy.zip
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      At a minimum, It has stealing, privacy, wage theft, power comsumption, and hardware scarcity issues.

      Taking a couple of those away would help. A large part is the fear that it’s taking away our livelihoods, and it’s not even really good at it. It’s also polluting and running on enough pirated data that we’d be sent to prison forever if we, as individuals tried it.

      It shines at assisting professionals in specific fields, reading things like body scans, blood tests, and patient histories, and finding correlations. It’s good at helping DevOps/IT people who have to rarely maintain a bunch of oddball systems. It’s decent at finding inconsistencies in code documentation and documenting code that isn’t documented.

      It’s bad at art compared to an artist It’s good at art compared to an average electrician.

      It’s good at taking work from artists, making side money on Fiverr. It’s great at marketing to CEO’s.

      There’s a lot more there than social issues.

    • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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      6 hours ago

      And if it was even partly accurate, having all the down sides on top of being given absolutely trash level output is a bit of a downer.