Microsoft (MSFT) is prepared to release its long-awaited artificial intelligence-powered Recall feature for Windows 11 PCs to developers as part of the Windows Insider program.
The business first unveiled Recall in May, when it introduced its Copilot+ PCs, which are AI PCs with a specific set of functionality for running native AI applications. Recall is intended to collect screenshots of the many operations you perform while using your computer, such as browsing the web or working on a project.
The goal is for you to be able to search through Recall’s screenshots and take action on them. Assume you were searching for flights and accommodations for a forthcoming vacation or conducting research for a work assignment when you closed your browser. You’d be able to search Recall for information on those themes and pull up the relevant screenshots.
You could then use Microsoft’s Click to Do feature, which is also in preview, to take action on those screenshots. For example, you’d be able to copy text, return to the page that Recall grabbed, and alter images.
Recall may appear to be a useful way to keep track of your activities and return to chores that need to be completed, but security researchers and privacy experts quickly raised concerns. The danger is that hackers or other cyber criminals would acquire access to Recall’s screenshots and obtain sensitive user data.
Microsoft then made a series of adjustments to Recall, including making it an opt-in option rather than an opt-out feature, which means users must select to use it rather than having it available by default.
The business also stated that Recall screenshots, or Snapshots as Microsoft refers to them, are encrypted and may only be retrieved with the company’s Windows Hello login mechanism. You can also specify whether or not Recall stores data from specified websites. The program will also detect when you are typing sensitive information such as credit card numbers, passwords, or other personal identification numbers and will temporarily disable screenshot saving.
Microsoft also says you’ll be able to disable Recall from the Windows settings menu, and the capability will be automatically disabled from PCs managed by administrators for work and school.
The Recall preview will initially be accessible only for Windows 11 laptops powered by Qualcomm’s (QCOM) Snapdragon processors. Intel (INTC) and AMD (AMD) laptops will have to wait.
All of this is part of Microsoft’s aim to entice customers to support its Copilot+ PC initiative. The overall goal of the platform is to deliver generative AI capabilities to Windows PCs via both on-device and cloud-based AI services.
Microsoft already provides its flagship AI feature, Copilot, to users, but it is continuing to extend the program to provide consumers more reasons to upgrade to AI PCs.
Microsoft isn’t the only corporation that touts AI as a key selling factor. Apple has already released its first set of Apple Intelligence capabilities for the iPhone, iPad, and Mac, while Google is incorporating AI into its software and Pixel phones.
It’s impossible to say whether people are actually interested in AI just yet. If you want Microsoft’s latest Surface laptop with Qualcomm’s Snapdragon chip—an fantastic device—you’re getting an AI PC, even if you didn’t intend to. Likewise if you get a new iPhone. Even if you aren’t interested in the AI capabilities, you are purchasing an AI smartphone.
We’ll have to wait and see how many consumers use AI PC and AI smartphone apps, as well as how frequently, to determine whether the categories are successful in and of themselves.