Windows Recall AI snapshots stored in an unencrypted SQL file in appdata. Apparently. Already there is scripts to install it on unsupported devices.

Probably a stupid question but Im just not super computer savvy. Privacy issues aside, would the constant data capture not bog the machine down considerably after a bit? Or eat up your free storage space? I know images arent very big files but if you have a screenshot every 5 seconds that is 12 every minute... that is going to add up right? And to further the question....if somehow this whole recall thing rolls out the way Microsoft envisions and it does eat up too mich local storage/memory, are they going to try to sell you a subscription to storing the Recall data on their cloud in order to free up your own computer?

I miss file explorers, actual buttons and yelling at kids to stop touching the screen, and the fear of magnets too close to the cpu :(
 
Storage for normal computers isn't an issue any more and taking a screenshot every 3 minutes is practically nothing.
Keep in mind your computer when you play a game generates an image to display on the screen (for good games) at 60+ frames per second so taking 1 frame and saving it as a file every 3 minutes is nothing for a modern PC.

This is more of a security issue.
 
I love how actual retards try and gaslight themselves into staying in the increasingly anti-consumer Microsoft ecosystem by pretending Linux is this esoteric bullshit when there are literally nocoding autists on /g/ that can do the extremely trivial task of right clicking and picking some anime picture as their wallpaper on the desktop to show off their desktop "rice". If you can't do that, you shouldn't be on a computer. You should be in the fields, where you belong. Also using 20 year old memes that haven't been true since Ubuntu came on the scene.
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Thanks for proving my point, epic hackerooski. Hope papa Stallman sees this.
 
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Thanks for proving my point, epic hackerooski. Hope papa Stallman sees this.
I don't even like Stallman because he's a sperg that gets mad as soon as a single non-free package is in your repos. Consider that not all Linux users are the same and have more experience using it than a retarded shitposter who literally can't see basic tutorials on Youtube to do basic tasks.
 
firefox stores user passwords in plain text too btw
I always thought it was retarded to let your browser save your password anyway.
The amount of Windows cope in this thread is disturbing. It's been total shit since Win 7 and it's never getting better again.
I still prefer Windows 7 over Linux. I miss it so much. But I refuse to use something that no longer gets security updates, especially when I do networking/work stuff on my PC. But I really do fucking hate Windows 11 and try to strip out most of the bullshit while keeping security updates. Even when stripped down I still dislike it, runs like ass from a stability standpoint. Always bouncing between Wangblows and Linux like our dear feeder.
 
Surely this will get everyone to finally switch to Linux!
Code:
wget https://dl.google.com/linux/direct/google-chrome-stable_current_amd64.deb
sudo dpkg -i google-chrome-stable_current_amd64.deb
sudo apt --fix-broken install
*reinstalls windows*
 
What happens with situations where you have company terminals that use individual logins to access confidential data? I’m thinking about stuff like the NHS. Say you’re a doctor or nurse on shift. You share a few computers with everyone and you have to log in to your profile with a keycard which gives you access to whatever info your profile allows in the system. So nurse Doris logs in and sees one set of stuff, doctor Bob sees another but it’s the same machine.
So now locally stored in that machine is everyone’s activity? Across all those profiles? Who can access what from that recall activity?
A lot of companies work like that - it would be a huge security breach if the janitor was able to get hold of confidential stuff from the senior managements profile….
 
What happens with situations where you have company terminals that use individual logins to access confidential data? I’m thinking about stuff like the NHS. Say you’re a doctor or nurse on shift. You share a few computers with everyone and you have to log in to your profile with a keycard which gives you access to whatever info your profile allows in the system. So nurse Doris logs in and sees one set of stuff, doctor Bob sees another but it’s the same machine.
So now locally stored in that machine is everyone’s activity? Across all those profiles? Who can access what from that recall activity?
A lot of companies work like that - it would be a huge security breach if the janitor was able to get hold of confidential stuff from the senior managements profile….
This is not health care compliant at all. Any process on the machine can access the entire history, so by the time the virus gets detected, all those patient records have been exfiled.


Anyway! Microsoft has made an announcement on Recall changes. Cue :optimistic:.

Update on the Recall preview feature for Copilot+ PCs (Archive)
What MS says:
  • Setup now presents an opt-in/opt-out page.
  • Windows Hello (LOL) required to enable Recall.
  • "Just in time" decryption provided by Windows Hello so snapshots are only decrypted when the user authenticates.
  • The plaintext database with all your passwords, credit card numbers, and professed love for Mandy is encrypted.
Beaumont (who hates the Farms by the way) has this to say:
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Bonus Beaumont is a faggot evidence:
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You guys know that Windows 10 LTSC 1809 has support until 01-09-2029, right? And then, you can upgrade to 21H2, and change the product ID to IoT Enterprise and receive "Extended Support" which is essentially security patches, all one really needs, until 01-13-2032. The Windows 10 apocalypse has been greatly exagerated.

Say what you want about AI now but I distinctly remember many people frequently using AI upscaler like Waifu2x constantly with very little complaints for years.

Unless you mean a specific branch of AI, Machine learning isn't something that was invented yesterday, and its usefulness has been proven for years.

Yep, the humble roots of the current "AI" goes all the way back to 2010, and that work is based on research already done by a Japanese academic all the way back in 1985. So, current "AI" is not revolutionary, it's strictly evolutionary, it just suddenly happened to finally become useful.

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It also literally says it on the sticker.

In this case they mean an NPU capable of a minimum of 40 TOPS, until 2024, these machines didn't exist. The current iterations of these NPU's powerful enough to handle CoPilot+ are currently only in ARM64 machines, the x86 CPU's with integrated NPU that can handle 40+ TOPS aren't out yet, but they will be later this year. For AMD that will be their Zen5, for Intel that will be Lunar Lake,
 
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Glad to see loonixfags never fail to insert themselves into every Winblows issue to remind everyone of their superior OS inbetween using their phone to google how to change the wallpaper.
I mean, what alternatives are there other than pulling a Terry and making your own OS. Fucking Solaris?
At some point everyone's gonna be forced to make a decision between bending over for microsoft or jumping ship, and we might be approaching such a point if this feature doesn't get scrapped.
 
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