Each time Microsoft introduced a significant AI feature this year, I couldn’t help but feel more skeptical about the company’s new direction. Here’s Microsoft, a notoriously conservative and slow-moving giant, reshaping its products around artificial intelligence not long after most people learned generative AI existed. The last time it made such a dramatic shift we got Windows 8, a failed attempt at making its flagship OS tablet and touchscreen friendly.
Now, the company is bringing AI right into the heart of Windows and I’m left wondering: Is Microsoft jumping into artificial intelligence to actually make its products better? Or is it just trying to stake a claim as an AI innovator and pray that the technology actually lives up to the hype? At this point, it’s genuinely hard to tell.
As the Zune, WebTV and Windows Phone have shown, Microsoft isn’t so great at timing. Its products often either land too early to be useful (as in the case of the sluggish WebTV), or arrive far too late to…
2023-12-26 09:30:55
Original from www.engadget.com