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  • Windows 11 AI-powered Recall feature can run on unsupported laptops but suffers HUGE performance loss without Copilot+ PC NPUs


    Karlston

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    • 519 views
    • 4 minutes

    Turns out you can run Windows Recall in Windows 11 without a Copilot+ PC and a powerful NPU, but is it worth it?

    What you need to know

    • Microsoft unveiled a host of next-gen AI features that will ship with Windows 11 exclusively to Copilot+ PCs with powerful NPUs.
    • A user bypassed these stringent requirements and got Windows Recall to work on Arm64 hardware.
    • The feature's user experience is laggy and slow, as seen in the video demo, demonstrating the need for a powerful NPU.

     


     

    While Microsoft's stringent requirements limit its new and controversial Windows 11 Recall feature to Copilot+ PCs with powerful NPUs like Qualcomm's Snapdragon X chips, Windows sleuth Albacore has seemingly found a cheat code that lets the neat feature run on traditional Windows 11 PCs, spotting Arm64 hardware (via TechRadar).

     

    Per the video by the well-known Windows hacker Albacore, the feature functions precisely as Microsoft explained. However, the demo is a tad laggy, reiterating Microsoft's NPU threshold for running AI features in Windows 11 smoothly. As you may know, an NPU (Neural Processing Unit) is designed to help light the processing power load from the GPU and CPU on PCs, fostering better performance.

     

    The video highlights how the screenray function will work on Windows 11 Recall. Screenray is when you enter context-sensitive mode and leverage Windows 11 Recall's capabilities to trace back your steps.

     

    Albacore added that the feature "should theoretically work on Intel/AMD too; OEMs only received Arm64 specific ML model bundles, so there's not much I can do yet."

    Windows Recall causes security and privacy concerns

     

    "One of the dreams we've always had is how do we introduce memory," stated Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella while talking to The Wall Street Journal's Joanna Stern about Windows 11's new and controversial AI feature, Windows Recall. "Right? Photographic memory into what you do on your PC? And now we have it."

     

    During Microsoft's special Windows and Surface event, the company announced a host of next-gen AI features shipping to Windows 11 as part of the Windows 11 2024 Update (version 24H2), including Live Captions, Windows Recall, and more. The latter stole the show, raising user concerns over security and privacy issues.

     

    Windows Recall runs in the background of your PC and captures snapshots of everything you see and do, enabling the ability to search for anything you've ever done on your PC with natural language. 

     

    Microsoft promises that the feature is 100% privacy-focused since it runs on-device via NPU. It's presented to users as an opt-in experience, and users can disable it at any time via the settings. 

     

    What's more, you can restrict the feature from grabbing screenshots from specific apps or websites (which are stored locally on your PC). Users can also choose how long they'd like the screenshots stored and how much space is dedicated to this function.

     

    Interestingly, the only way to get the new Recall feature is by buying a new Copilot+ PC. This is because the feature relies on a powerful NPU for its function. Microsoft has remained quiet if/when it plans to ship the next-gen AI features to traditional Windows 11 PCs without/with less powerful NPUs. 

     

    Windows 11 Recall is impressive and controversial, but at the same time, there's so much it can help you achieve. And despite Microsoft's 100% privacy-focused promise and running the feature locally with on-device NPU, users have blatantly expressed their reservations toward the feature.

     

    Some users have even indicated that they'll soon transition to other operating systems like Linux as Windows 10's end-of-support looms. Elon Musk even compares the AI feature to a Black Mirror episode. In the interim, the UK data watchdog is investigating Microsoft's new controversial AI feature to determine the safeguards to protect user privacy.

     

    Source

     

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