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Windows 11 users get Copilot as the default AI chatbot from Microsoft on the latest PCs on the market.

Microsoft wants to be able to use AI to alert you to system problems.
Windows 11 PCs come with Copilot AI as a built-in chatbot, along with a dedicated key for your new laptop. Most of the features have been largely unknown so far, but new AI-powered features could ultimately make them useful to millions of people.
According to the report, Windows 11 is being tested to allow Copilot AI to check system resource usage and figure out what’s slowing down your PC.
Most users feel that their PC is slow due to heavy apps, but system usage is a big problem and difficult for most users to monitor. This AI-powered feature could make things easier to understand and fix.
AI updates that most Windows 11 users prefer
Report by Windows latest I found a reference to this AI feature called PC Insights that appears to be built into Copilot. This will tell you about your system’s performance and the problems your machine is facing.
The report cites references available through the app’s codebase, but Microsoft reportedly said the feature will likely roll out gradually in the US first, and then in other regions.
Being able to analyze your PC with Copilot means you can ask the chatbot questions and get detailed answers through the usual interface. The PC Insights feature is customized to work only through the granular details of your system and does not read any content or files stored on your device, the report adds.
Utilization of AI
Using Copilot is probably not the most popular option among users, preferring to use ChatGPT or Claude. But Copilot’s system-level integration makes it an ideal AI chatbot that can not only answer complex questions, but at a deeper level, answering them with only the system in mind.
This basically reduces the context of Task Manager on your Windows PC. Because you can let the AI do all the work with just basic prompts and refer to the details whenever you need them via the internet.
System-level AI monitoring is solely based on users giving permission to access their data. And the report suggests that Microsoft will never use the analyzed data to further train its AI systems.
About the author
Aadeetya, Chief Sub-Editor at News18 Tech, ventured into the world of journalism 10 years ago and has since then been part of an established media house, covering and supporting the latest trends in technology.read more
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