US Microsoft wants to move Windows fully to the cloud

Microsoft wants to move Windows fully to the cloud / A new Microsoft internal presentation reveals the company’s long-term goal for Windows.​

By Tom Warren, a senior editor covering Microsoft, PC gaming, console, and tech. He founded WinRumors, a site dedicated to Microsoft news, before joining The Verge in 2012.
Jun 27, 2023, 12:58 PM GMT+2

Microsoft has been increasingly moving Windows to the cloud on the commercial side with Windows 365, but the software giant also wants to do the same for consumers. In an internal “state of the business” Microsoft presentation from June 2022, Microsoft discuses building on “Windows 365 to enable a full Windows operating system streamed from the cloud to any device.”

The presentation has been revealed as part of the ongoing FTC v. Microsoft hearing, as it includes Microsoft’s overall gaming strategy and how that relates to other parts of the company’s businesses. Moving “Windows 11 increasingly to the cloud” is identified as a long-term opportunity in Microsoft’s “Modern Life” consumer space, including using “the power of the cloud and client to enable improved AI-powered services and full roaming of people’s digital experience.”

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Microsoft’s state of the business from June 2022. Image: Microsoft

Windows 365 is a service that streams a full version of Windows to devices. So far, it’s been limited to just commercial customers, but Microsoft has been deeply integrating it into Windows 11 already. A future update will include Windows 365 Boot, which will enable Windows 11 devices to log directly in to a Cloud PC instance at boot instead of the local version of Windows. Windows 365 Switch is also built into Windows 11 to integrate Cloud PCs into the Task View (virtual desktops) feature.

The idea of moving Windows fully to the cloud for consumers is also presented alongside Microsoft’s need to invest in custom silicon partnerships. Microsoft has been doing some of this for its ARM-powered Surface Pro X devices. Bloomberg also reported in late 2020 that Microsoft was looking at designing its own ARM-based processors for servers and maybe even Surface devices. More recently we’ve heard Microsoft could be working on its own AI chips, too.

In another slide in the presentation, Microsoft mentions the need to “shore up Windows commercial value and respond to Chromebook threat” for its “Modern Work” priorities in its 2022 financial year. Long term opportunities on the commercial side include growing the usage of cloud PCs with Windows 365.

Microsoft has recently announced Windows Copilot, an AI-powered assistant for Windows 11. Windows Copilot sits at the side of Windows 11, and can summarize content you’re viewing in apps, rewrite it, or even explain it. Microsoft is currently testing this internally and promised to release it to testers in June before rolling it out more broadly to Windows 11 users.

Windows Copilot is part of a broader AI push for Windows. Microsoft is also working with AMD and Intel to enable more Windows features on next-gen CPUs. Intel and Microsoft have even hinted at Windows 12 in recent months, and Windows chief Panos Panay claimed at CES earlier this year that “AI is going to reinvent how you do everything on Windows.” All of this is part of Microsoft’s broad Windows ambition, detailed in its internal presentation, “to enable improved AI-powered services” in Windows.

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They won't be able to do it completely. Enterprise users will still want for their Windows based shit to be ran locally and reliably so they will have to release LTSC versions for enterprise users, and home users can just go to MyDigitalLife and get it from there for free.

It would definitely be a perfect solution for them but they simply can't do that, nor can they rewrite Windows from scratch. They've made their bed by establishing market dominance in the 90's with Windows NT and then building on top of that base both in consumer and enterprise markets for over two decades.
 
Maybe more appropriate for I&T? The Azure VDI thing eluded to in the article has been around for a while and I don't know anyone using it tbh. What worries me is that normie laptops will just become Windows thin clients sandboxed to within an inch of their lives, basically unable to do anything useful.

If MS can't achieve what they want via gentle persuasion (e.g. annoying popups), they'll force you via OEMs. I look forward to the new generation of braindead thin clients that'll fuckup the laptop market more than it already is. If only someone would grow some balls and anti-trust Microsoft into non existence.
 
A lot of you underestimate the laziness or desire for abuse that a huge majority of computer users display, even posters here. Guys, if people aren't already running Linux at home in the year of Yeshua 2023, they will find a way to spread em for Cloud Windows too.
 
They won't be able to do it completely. Enterprise users will still want for their Windows based shit to be ran locally and reliably so they will have to release LTSC versions for enterprise users, and home users can just go to MyDigitalLife and get it from there for free.
I hope you're right, but I'm not optimistic.

At least those of us on LTSC have between 4 and 6 years to prepare for a post-Windows 10 world. That said, I should probably start weaning myself off Windows sooner rather than later in preparation for the inevitable. The fun part will be trying to find the least pozzed Linux distro I can, as it seems like most of them are at least mildly infected with programmer sock shit.
 
Moving “Windows 11 increasingly to the cloud” is identified as a long-term opportunity in Microsoft’s “Modern Life” consumer space, including using “the power of the cloud and client to enable improved AI-powered services and full roaming of people’s digital experience.”

I don't know what this gobbledygook means but I'm getting along just fine without it.
Microsoft has recently announced Windows Copilot, an AI-powered assistant for Windows 11. Windows Copilot sits at the side of Windows 11, and can summarize content you’re viewing in apps, rewrite it, or even explain it. Microsoft is currently testing this internally and promised to release it to testers in June before rolling it out more broadly to Windows 11 users.

Just another thing that takes up space that I have to disable. I bet they won't let you delete Copilot.

I don't need an AI explaining my computer to me. If I need help I can get it from real live people. Zoomers are tech illiterate enough as is. Subsequent generations will be even worse. No one will be able to do anything without their AI buddy from the cloud. All but a handful will be able to understand the most basic concepts unassisted. So the masses will be less and less likely to be able to modify Windows or fix simple problems. At that point we'll take whatever they shove at us willingly because we don't know any better.
 
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