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Microsoft’s Copilot on Windows 11 is shedding its “chat-first” skin and opening a new, dashboard-style Home tab that behaves less like a conversational window and more like an AI-centric Start menu — surfacing recent files, apps, conversations, and guided help in one place.

A futuristic AI dashboard with floating translucent panels against a pastel gradient background.Background​

Microsoft has been iterating Copilot across products for more than a year, moving from sidebar helper and PWA experiments into a full native app that’s intended to sit at the center of productivity on Windows. The latest Home redesign is rolling out as a staged update to the Copilot app (app builds starting with version 1.25082.132.0 and above) through the Microsoft Store and has appeared in Windows Insider previews first. (blogs.windows.com)
Why this matters: the Home tab reframes Copilot as a workflow hub, not just a place to ask a question. It surfaces context — the apps you recently used, the files you worked on, and the conversations you’d started — and gives you one-click ways to re-engage that context using AI. Several independent outlets and Microsoft’s own blog confirm the change and the broader strategy of embedding Copilot into discovery and file workflows on Windows. (windowscentral.com, techradar.com)

What’s new in the Copilot Home UI​

The Home tab replaces the “chat-first” landing with a modular dashboard built from interactive cards. Early previews and hands-on coverage identify at least four primary modules that appear together on the Home surface:
  • Recent files card (quickly attach or open recent documents).
  • Recent conversations card (resume previous Copilot chats).
  • Copilot Pages / persistent canvas card (edit or continue AI-generated pages). (support.microsoft.com, microsoft.com)
  • Get guided help with your apps card (launch a Copilot Vision session focused on a selected app).
These cards are interactive rather than static: clicking a recent file can either open it in its default app, attach it to the Copilot composer for analysis, or ask Copilot to summarize the content. The recent files view mirrors the standard Windows “Recent” list rather than performing a blind system-wide crawl, and Microsoft emphasizes that explicit attachment is required to send a file to Copilot for processing. (blogs.windows.com, livemint.com)

A Start menu for AI?​

The analogy is easy to make: much like the Start menu, the Copilot Home aims to be the first stop for resuming work — except instead of just launching the app, Copilot hands you an AI-powered lens on that app or file. That lends the Home tab a launcher-plus-assistant feel: launcher for apps/files, assistant for the actions you want to take next.

Deep dive: how each major card works​

Recent files — fast context, permissioned processing​

The Recent files card surfaces files from Windows’ standard Recent folder and File Explorer Quick Access. Each entry provides a three-dot menu with options such as Open, Attach to prompt, and Summarize. Choosing Open simply launches the file in its default handler (for example, Word for .docx), while Attach to prompt places the file in the composer so Copilot can analyze it after you send the query. Summarize runs Copilot’s analysis pipeline against the file contents.
Important privacy note: Microsoft’s documentation and its Insider post make clear the Home surface doesn’t automatically upload or process your files; clicking attach or otherwise selecting a file is the explicit permission event. The semantic search and file indexing that enable richer queries are limited to indexed locations and — in early rollouts — gated to Copilot+ hardware in some scenarios. (blogs.windows.com)

Copilot Pages — from ephemeral chats to persistent workspace​

Copilot Pages is Microsoft’s answer to the problem of ephemeral chat outputs. Pages let you convert AI responses into editable, shareable, persistent canvases that you can reopen and co-edit with Copilot or teammates. Pages are already documented in Microsoft’s Copilot support pages and have been promoted as a major workflow improvement for both personal and enterprise use. Expect Pages to be surfaced in the Home tab for quick resumption. (support.microsoft.com, techcommunity.microsoft.com)

Get guided help with your apps — Vision-driven step-by-step​

One of the most notable Home features is Get guided help with your apps. Clicking an app tile launches a Copilot Vision session that can see the selected app window (or the desktop, with permission), listen to voice, and provide step-by-step guidance or interpret on-screen content in real time. Microsoft documents this workflow — you initiate Vision via the glasses icon, select which app windows to share (up to two), and grant permission to start the session. Vision can highlight UI elements and offer voice walkthroughs, but it will not act on your behalf (it won’t click or type for you). (support.microsoft.com, tomsguide.com)
Practical example reported by testers: launching a Vision session for Power BI immediately updates the session banner with the detected window title and allows Copilot to point out UI elements and explain how to perform tasks. That makes Copilot a live tutor for complex apps, not just a static help page.

Semantic search and Copilot+ hardware gating​

Microsoft is rolling semantic file and image search into Copilot. Rather than literal filename matches, semantic search uses embeddings and vector retrieval to surface items that match the meaning of a query (e.g., “find the file with the chicken tostada recipe” or “show images of bridges at sunset”). The implementation uses a hybrid of a standard lexical index plus a semantic index that can be computed on-device when Copilot+ NPUs (Neural Processing Units) are present. This provides lower-latency, privacy-preserving inference on capable hardware. (blogs.windows.com)
Key technical details Microsoft has published include:
  • Supported file types for in-chat analysis: .png, .jpeg, .svg, .pdf, .docx, .xlsx, .csv, .json, and .txt. (blogs.windows.com)
  • Language optimization initially for English, Chinese (Simplified), French, German, Japanese, and Spanish.
  • On-device inference uses a small, optimized model when NPU hardware is available; cloud-assisted fallback is available on non‑Copilot+ devices.
This architecture is important because it balances utility and latency with privacy and enterprise governance — but it also creates a tiered experience where some advanced features will appear first on Copilot+ PCs.

Agents, AI Shell and automation (what Microsoft showed vs. what’s in the preview)​

Alongside the Home redesign, Microsoft has been rolling out a broader Agents strategy across Copilot Studio, Microsoft 365 Copilot, and Azure. Agents are prebuilt or custom AI components that can automate tasks, connect to data, and — when authorized — orchestrate services on behalf of users. Microsoft announced an Agent Store, prebuilt agents (Employee Self-Service, Skills agents), and developer tooling for multi-agent orchestration at Build and subsequent events. (techcommunity.microsoft.com, support.microsoft.com)
Microsoft has also demonstrated tools like AI Shell (an interactive shell in Azure that surfaces Copilot assistance inside a CLI) and connected agents capable of orchestrating multi-step workflows across services. Some demos at developer events showed agents interacting with cloud-hosted environments and scripted browser/terminal sessions for automation. (learn.microsoft.com)
Caution and clarification: one headline claim circulating in early hands-on reports — that Copilot’s upcoming Agent can “open a terminal and browser in a Linux shell running inside an Azure cloud virtual machine” and browse sites to complete tasks — has roots in Microsoft’s AI Shell and agent demos. While Microsoft’s platform supports cloud-hosted agent execution and automation, the exact behavior described in some previews may be a distilled paraphrase of demos and private previews rather than a verbatim description of a currently shipping Copilot-for-Windows feature. The multi-agent/capabilities roadmap is real, but the specific availability, UI, and permission model for agents that can spin up full Azure VMs or execute arbitrary browsing/terminal actions from the Copilot Windows app should be treated as preview-level and partially gated until Microsoft publishes it as broadly available. (learn.microsoft.com, windowscentral.com)

Privacy, security, and enterprise governance — the tough questions​

The Home tab’s power comes from context: access to recent files, the ability to drop a file into a chat, and the capability to let Copilot see (and hear) an app window. Those are useful by design, but they raise legitimate concerns for users and IT administrators:
  • Explicit consent vs. implicit surface: Microsoft’s guidance stresses that attaching a file or starting a Vision session is an explicit consent event, and recent files are simply surfaced from the standard Recent folder. That reduces the risk of unintentional uploads, but it does not eliminate concerns about what Copilot can surface or how indexing is configured. (blogs.windows.com, support.microsoft.com)
  • Data flow and storage: Microsoft documents that Copilot Vision sessions and file processing follow its data handling rules (Vision sessions, for example, do not log page content permanently; user inputs and images are not stored beyond the session as described in the support pages). Still, enterprises will want to review retention, telemetry, and egress behaviors for their compliance needs. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Hardware gating and fragmentation: Copilot+ gating means some organizations will have a bifurcated user experience where features, latency, and privacy characteristics differ across devices. That complicates standardization and policy enforcement.
  • Agent risk surface: Agents that can automate external actions — especially if they can control browsers or cloud shells — must be governed strictly. Microsoft’s Agent Store and admin approval flows aim to mitigate risk, but the potential for agent misconfiguration or privilege abuse requires clear governance. (support.microsoft.com, windowscentral.com)

UX analysis: strengths, limitations, and what this signals for Windows​

Strengths — why the Home UI makes sense​

  • Reduced context switching: Surfacing recent files and apps with one-click attach or guided help keeps users in flow and reduces manual steps.
  • Familiar mental model: The Start‑menu-like dashboard fits existing user expectations for a “home” surface; that lowers the learning curve.
  • Actionable AI: Copilot is shifting from passive chat to actionable assistance — summarization, step-by-step help, and Pages that persist outputs. (microsoft.com, blogs.windows.com)

Limitations and friction points​

  • Feature fragmentation: Copilot+ hardware gating will create inconsistent feature availability. IT teams and power users will need to map capabilities to hardware profiles.
  • Discoverability vs. intrusion: Putting Copilot prompts and upsells into high-visibility surfaces like the Home card or Start menu can feel promotional if not handled carefully. Prior experiments with recommendation cards in Start triggered such reactions.
  • Reliance on indexing and supported formats: Semantic search is powerful but only for indexed locations and supported file types; users with un-indexed archives or exotic formats will not immediately benefit. (blogs.windows.com)

Practical guidance — for everyday users and IT admins​

Below are practical steps to prepare for and safely adopt the Copilot Home experience.
  • For end users:
  • Review Copilot permission prompts before you accept a Vision session or attach a file.
  • Use the “Hide all recent files” toggle if you don’t want local documents surfaced on the Home tab.
  • For IT admins:
  • Audit which devices will be Copilot+ capable and whether you want to enable on‑device semantic indexing.
  • Define policies for agent approval and pinning in the Agent Store; require admin approval for agents that connect to sensitive systems. (support.microsoft.com)
  • For privacy officers:
  • Map Copilot’s data flow: confirm retention, telemetry, and egress rules for Vision sessions and file uploads with legal/compliance teams. Microsoft publishes support guidance for Vision and Copilot data handling that should be reviewed. (support.microsoft.com)
  • For device procurement:
  • If low-latency, on-device semantic search is important, evaluate Copilot+ PC options with NPUs capable of the required TOPS performance. Microsoft’s Copilot+ program documents the hardware expectations for advanced on-device features.

Risks and where to be cautious​

  • Assumed equivalence between demo and shipping product: Some demos shown at events (agents running inside cloud shells, full browser automation) are powerful but may only exist as private previews or developer tools today. Treat headline demos as indicative of direction, not guarantee of immediate availability on every Windows 11 device. (learn.microsoft.com)
  • Overtrust in AI outputs: Summaries and automated actions are helpful shortcuts, but they can hallucinate or miss critical nuance. Users must treat AI outputs as helpers, not authoritative replacements for domain expertise.
  • Operational exposure from automation: Agents that can act across systems create efficiency but also multiply the blast radius of misconfigurations. Conservative rollout, strict approval workflows, and least-privilege agent design are essential. (support.microsoft.com)

The big picture: what the Copilot Home signals for Windows’ future​

This Home redesign is more than UI polish; it’s a marker of Microsoft’s intent to make Copilot a primary discovery and productivity surface in Windows. By unifying recent files, apps, conversations, and AI workflows in one place, Microsoft is changing how users will start their work: less file-hunting and more contextual AI assistance available at a glance. That approach is consistent with Microsoft’s broader Copilot strategy — Pages, Vision, Agents, and on-device semantics are all pieces of the same puzzle to make Windows an intent-aware platform rather than a passive operating system. (blogs.windows.com, microsoft.com)
If Microsoft executes the governance, privacy, and admin controls well, Windows 11 could become markedly more productive for knowledge workers. If it doesn’t, the experience risks fragmenting, confusing users, and introducing avenues for accidental data exposure. For now, the Home tab is a promising step: it feels like a Start menu for AI, but its real value will be judged by controls, accuracy, and how seamlessly it reduces the friction of daily work.

Conclusion​

The Copilot Home UI turns the assistant into a functional landing page: a place to continue work, attach files for AI analysis, open persistent Pages, or ask for live, Vision-driven guidance inside an app. The feature set is real and rolling out through Insider previews and staged Microsoft Store updates, but its most advanced capabilities are being introduced in phases and, in some cases, gated by hardware. Microsoft’s documentation and multiple hands-on reports corroborate the major elements — Vision sessions, semantic search, Pages, and agents — but cautious readers should treat some of the more ambitious agent automation demos as preview rather than ubiquitous production features. (blogs.windows.com, support.microsoft.com, techcommunity.microsoft.com)
For users and admins, the immediate priorities are understanding permission prompts, adjusting indexing and privacy settings, and planning governance for agents and on-device AI. The Home tab is a clear signal: Copilot is evolving from a chat box into a centralized AI workspace for Windows — and that will change how people find, act on, and automate work on their PCs.

Source: WindowsLatest Copilot on Windows 11 has a new "Home" UI and it feels like a Start menu for AI
 

Microsoft's Copilot app for Windows 11 just received a redesign that does more than tidy the chat window — it reorganizes Copilot into a Start menu–style hub that surfaces recent files, apps, and ongoing work, and hints at a deeper future in which the AI assistant becomes the central navigation and discovery layer of the OS.

A futuristic holographic computer screen shows a Copilot UI with recent files and conversations.Background​

The Microsoft Copilot experience has evolved rapidly from a sidebar/chatbox into a fully fledged app that sits on the desktop like any other Windows program. What began as an Edge-centered chat has been rebuilt as a native Windows UI using modern app frameworks, and successive releases have been adding features that let Copilot reach beyond one-off queries into the user’s ongoing workflows.
Recent updates convert the Copilot home page from a single chat canvas into a compact dashboard-style landing page. That new home aggregates a short list of your recently used files, a history of recent Copilot conversations, quick app shortcuts, and a persistent way to pick up work on richer, editable Copilot Pages. The update is being distributed through the Microsoft Store as a staged rollout, so some systems see the change immediately while others will get it over days or weeks.
This redesign is more than cosmetic. It reframes Copilot as a workspace hub, not just an AI chat partner, and brings several capabilities that highlight the ways Microsoft is embedding generative AI deeper into Windows:
  • A dashboard-style home that resembles the Start menu in spirit, surfacing context rather than only queries.
  • Quick upload of recent files into a conversation for summarization, analysis, or follow-up actions.
  • A “Work on Copilot Pages” entry point for persistent, editable documents that live alongside chat.
  • A “Get guided help with your apps” area that launches a Copilot Vision session to show and explain UI elements in real time.
  • Semantic file search and enhanced local search features on qualifying AI-capable hardware.
These changes are rolling out as part of regular Copilot app updates; some of the more advanced features (semantic file search and certain on-device accelerations) are gated to Copilot+ hardware that includes high-performance neural processing units (NPUs).

What changed in the Copilot app — a closer look​

The new home: dashboard over chat​

The most visible change is the home page. Instead of opening to a centered chat prompt and a long conversation thread, the Copilot app now opens to a compact, modular page that organizes your most relevant context into tiles and panels.
Key elements on the new home include:
  • Recent files: A left-column list of files you’ve opened recently on the PC. Clicking a file brings it into Copilot for actions such as summarization, extraction, or image/object recognition.
  • Recent conversations: Quick access to previous Copilot chats so you can continue threads without recreating context.
  • Work on Copilot Pages: A hub for multi-session, editable “Pages” — persistent canvases for research, draft documents, or coding that let Copilot help over multiple editing cycles.
  • Get guided help with your apps: Shortcuts that start a Copilot Vision session against the selected app to get step‑by‑step help with UI tasks.
The dashborad approach treats Copilot like an extension of the Start menu’s “what you need right now” philosophy: it predicts context and surfaces likely next steps rather than asking you to type a query first.

Copilot Vision and interactive help​

Copilot Vision now integrates more tightly with the new home view. The “guided help with your apps” entry starts a Vision session that sees the app window you choose and can provide visual pointers, highlight controls, and speak step-by-step instructions.
This is explicitly an opt‑in experience: you select which app window to share, a floating toolbar appears while Vision is active, and Copilot will not take input control (it highlights and shows, rather than clicking for you). The Vision flow is meant for tasks such as learning where to turn on a setting, getting help in a photo or video editor, or understanding a complex dialog box.

Semantic file search and local context​

Another headline capability shipping with recent updates is semantic file search on qualifying hardware. Instead of needing exact filenames or folder paths, Copilot on Windows can use natural-language descriptions to find files stored on the device — for example “find my CV” or “find images of red cars from last summer.”
This functionality, and some other on-device features, are tied to a class of systems that Microsoft brands as Copilot+ PCs. Those machines have dedicated NPUs and system requirements meant to run certain AI workloads locally and more efficiently.

Copilot Pages: persistent workspaces​

Copilot Pages are persistent, editable canvases where outputs from Copilot can be turned into shareable, revisable documents. Think of a Pages document as a “living” outcome from several Copilot sessions: draft text, extracted data, or structured notes you can continue editing with Copilot assistance.
Pages aim to move Copilot beyond the ephemeral Q&A model and into persistent productivity — projects, code snippets, and multi‑step writing work that benefit from being accessible at a glance from the Copilot home.

The technical facts you need to know​

  • The new Copilot home and semantic search were introduced in staged updates pushed through the Microsoft Store. The rollout is gradual; not every Windows 11 machine will see the change at the same time.
  • Certain Copilot features are hardware-gated. The Copilot+ PC classification requires an NPU capable of doing 40+ trillion operations per second (40+ TOPS), and minimum system targets such as 16 GB RAM and 256 GB storage. Those Copilot+ capabilities enable on-device accelerations that are not available on standard Windows 11 hardware.
  • Copilot Vision and the guided help flow are explicit, permissioned experiences: you choose which window(s) Copilot can analyze, and there’s a visible floating toolbar while Vision is active. Vision will not autonomously click or type on your behalf; it highlights and explains.
  • File surfacing works by referencing the system’s standard “Recent” surface; Copilot will not automatically upload or process every file on the machine. If you click a file to attach it to Copilot, that action grants Copilot permission to process its contents.
These claims are consistent with Microsoft’s product documentation and the staged Windows Insider communications that describe the new home, file access behavior, and the Copilot Vision flows.

Why this matters: the Start menu as the AI hub​

The design pivot in Copilot’s home page is small in pixels but large in implication. By borrowing the Start menu’s role as a launch-and-surface space, Microsoft is experimenting with making Copilot the cognitive entry point for Windows activity.
This has three practical effects:
  • Fewer context switches. If your assistant already shows your recent files and active app windows, jumping from “what am I working on?” to “what can Copilot do with this?” is immediate. That reduces friction in workflows like editing, debugging, or research.
  • A single center for discovery. Copilot can recommend actions, surface prior conversations, and offer Pages for ongoing work. That positions the assistant as a persistent collaborator rather than a one-off tool.
  • Bridges between local and generative AI. The app ties local files and app views to generative capabilities, letting Copilot use what’s on your machine as context for generation, summarization, or action.
If Microsoft flips this model the other way — embedding the Copilot dashboard into the Start menu itself — the Start menu of the future could look much less like a simple launcher and much more like a context-aware, generative control surface for the entire desktop.

Strengths: what the redesign gets right​

  • Task continuity. The new home prioritizes continuing work (recent files + Pages) instead of forcing a fresh query every time. That’s an ergonomically better model for productivity.
  • Contextual help with real affordances. Copilot Vision’s “show me how” highlights deliver visual guidance inside an app — far more practical than text-only instructions.
  • Permissioned data access. The model of surfacing recent files without automatically uploading them gives users a clear control point: Copilot shows lists, but actions like upload/analysis require explicit consent.
  • On-device capabilities for qualifying hardware. For users with high-end AI-enabled machines, semantic search and other accelerations will yield faster, more private experiences.
  • Persistent project work. Copilot Pages creates a durable artifact of generative workflows, which is helpful when collaboration or revision is needed.
These strengths make the Copilot app a stronger candidate to become an integrated productivity layer in Windows, not just a novelty assistant.

Risks and unresolved questions​

  • Privacy and data governance. Even with explicit interactions required to upload a file, the fact that Copilot surfaces which files are recent can feel intrusive. Enterprises and privacy-conscious users will want clear, auditable controls and telemetry transparency.
  • Surface-level control vs. behavior. Microsoft’s documentation says Copilot references the system “Recent” folder; that’s technically accurate. But users may reasonably worry about what other metadata, telemetry, or inference Microsoft’s cloud services receive when Copilot processes content — especially for features that can leverage cloud models or shared organizational data.
  • Fragmentation by hardware. Meaningfully different experiences across Copilot+ PCs and standard Windows 11 PCs could confuse users and IT admins. Companies with mixed fleets will need policies for capability handling and support.
  • Potential for monetization pressure. Past experiments have shown Microsoft using Start/recommendation areas for promotional items. Surface and Start integration of Copilot may increase opportunities to promote Copilot Pro, Microsoft 365 subscriptions, or partner experiences, which could reduce perceived neutrality and risk turning a productivity surface into a marketing channel.
  • Reliability and hallucination risk. As Copilot becomes more action‑oriented (e.g., launching Vision sessions, summarizing documents), the consequences of inaccurate outputs increase. Users must be encouraged to validate critical outputs, and Microsoft needs robust guardrails for high‑stakes tasks.
  • Agentification and scope creep. Microsoft’s broader Copilot strategy includes an Agent ecosystem and an Agent Store oriented to automating workflows. Integrating agents into the Windows Copilot app could bring real productivity gains, but it also brings governance and security challenges: what permissions do agents request, how do they access organizational systems, and who audits their behavior?
Some of the most forward-looking items—such as making full agent ecosystems available from the Windows Copilot UI—are still speculative in timing and scope. It’s important to treat agent integration as an emerging promise, not a completed capability.

Practical guidance for Windows users and IT admins​

If you want to try the new Copilot home or evaluate its fit in your environment, here are concrete, practical steps and checks.
  • Check for the Copilot app update in the Microsoft Store and install updates when offered.
  • Open the Copilot app and review the new home page panels; confirm whether Recent files, Conversations, Pages, and Guided app help appear.
  • Manage file permissions: open Copilot → profile/settings or Permissions and review what Copilot is allowed to access. Revoke or limit access if you prefer.
  • For Vision sessions, be explicit: only share windows you are comfortable letting the assistant analyze; stop Vision when finished with the floating toolbar.
  • If you’re an IT admin, verify Copilot policies in your management console and consider guidance for Copilot+ features and fleet-compatible hardware: enforce device-level policies and confirm compliance with local data protection rules before enabling broad deployment.
  • If you’re concerned about promotional content appearing in Start or Copilot surfaces, review taskbar and Start configuration options — some recommendation surfaces can be adjusted or disabled in system settings.
These steps emphasize control and testing: the architecture is permissioned, but organizational policies and individual caution are essential.

Bigger picture: where this fits in Windows’ AI trajectory​

Microsoft has been explicit about two parallel tracks: (1) embedding generative assistance into productivity workflows (document drafting, meeting summaries, Excel formulas), and (2) building an ecosystem of agents and tools that can automate business processes at scale.
This Copilot home redesign is a logical step in that trajectory: it strengthens Copilot’s role as the connective tissue between apps, local files, and cloud intelligence. If taken further, the Start menu itself could evolve into an AI-first surface where recommendations, tutorials, and personalized workflows are generated and updated based on what you’re doing — effectively turning the Start menu into a smart command center.
That vision has clear upside for productivity. But it also raises questions about attention, nudging, and the commercialization of core system surfaces. How Microsoft balances utility, privacy, and monetization will determine whether these changes are widely embraced.

Final analysis: cautious optimism​

The Copilot app’s makeover signals meaningful product maturity. Making Copilot a hub for ongoing work — with Pages, Vision-guided help, and semantic local search — is an obvious and useful next step for an assistant. The design choices show attention to workflow continuity and user control, and the permissioned Vision model is reasonable for balancing power and privacy.
At the same time, the rollout exposes predictable tensions: feature fragmentation by hardware, the risk of promotional creep into system surfaces, and growing reliance on a single AI layer for both discovery and action. Administrators must prepare governance policies, and users should pay attention to permission prompts.
In short: this redesign gives us a clear glimpse of what a more deeply AI-integrated desktop could feel like — a Start menu reimagined as an always‑aware assistant rather than a static launcher. That future is promising for productivity, but it will require deliberate policy work, clear privacy controls, and careful product design to keep it from becoming intrusive or confusing.
The Copilot app update is not just a UI refresh; it’s a statement of intent. Whether that intent becomes a helpful, unobtrusive evolution of the Start menu — or a more assertive system-level push toward subscription and promotion — depends on how Microsoft balances convenience, control, and commercial pressure in the months ahead.

Source: TechRadar Have we just got a glimpse of the Start menu of the future? Windows 11's Copilot app gets a radical makeover
 

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