Windows 11's new Recall feature allows apps to "travel back in time," and Microsoft says your privacy is safe with an NPU.
Having covered multiple Microsoft events in the past, this week's special press event where the company unveiled its new lineup of Surface hardware powered by Qualcomm's cutting-edge Snapdragon X Series SoCs (what our Editor-in-chief refers to as "The Great PC Reset") was by far the best I've seen yet.
And while we didn't get the beloved Windows Phone back or a Surface-themed variant, I'm stoked to see Microsoft go all in on Windows on Arm. We won't have to wait for long to lay hands on these shiny products, either. Microsoft promises that they will be available as early as next month.
On the Windows side of things, Microsoft is bringing a plethora of next-gen AI features to Windows 11 in June, including Recall, Live Captions, Windows Studio effects, and more. However, not everyone will have access to these sophisticated features. This is because they'll require a device with a neural processing unit (NPU) that can output up to 40 TOPS of power. Essentially, you'll need a Copilot+ PC to access them.
Is Windows 11's Recall feature diabolical?
There's no ETA on when Microsoft plans to ship these new features to 'traditional' Windows PCs in the wake of a new era of Windows PCs supercharged with AI. The Recall feature in particular caught my eye and is perhaps the most interesting feature shipping to Windows 11 next month. Simply put by our Senior Editor Zac Bowden:
"It's a tool that runs in the background and can capture snapshots of everything you see and do on your computer, enabling the ability to search for anything you've ever done on your PC with natural language."
Bowden's report also details that Recall will feature a timeline feature placed at the top of your screen that lets you scroll back based on your search input. The feature can achieve this because it has access to your screen which spans across apps, webpages, pictures, and more. Think of it like Microsoft Photos' scrollbar feature that lets you scheme through photos taken years ago in seconds, but the only difference here is that Recall has higher clearance to more than just photos.
I know, what does this mean for your privacy and security? Microsoft categorically stated that the feature is 100% privacy-focused. Simply put, the company won't use any of the data accessed by Recall to train its models.
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