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Windows 12 Reportedly Set for Release This Year as a Fully Modular, Subscription-Based, AI-Focused OS

LectureMaster

Or is it just one of Adam's balls in my throat?



As PCWorld's new report goes, the new OS, codenamed 'Hudson Valley Next,' is set to release later this year, right around the time when Windows 10's support ends.

The modular aspect of the OS is Microsoft's CorePC architecture project that they've been working on for years. It will redefine the Windows experience by allowing the addition and removal of components. This will help customise the OS for each build, whether it's a lighter-weight system, a gaming-prioritised build, etc.

Generally, Windows 12 will be a much more adaptive and customizable OS than any of its past versions. Visually, we may also see a major leap, as a new visual layout is expected to include transparent glass elements and a floating taskbar.

Unfortunately, these are the only bright sides to this new OS. Microsoft's Copilot, the AI assistant the company has been aggressively injecting across the ecosystem, will now be a core part of the next Windows iteration rather than a supplementary feature.

Some parts of the OS might also be locked away behind a subscription model that are expected to be "advanced AI services", etc.

These AI features won't come cheaply, with Windows 12 set to debut a new hardware requirement just as its predecessor did with the TPM 2.0 requirement. This time around, a dedicated NPU would be required, a specialized processor designed to handle AI tasks.

NPUs are still early-stage chips and not widely adopted across all systems. This requirement will lock out millions of PC owners from updating to Microsoft's next OS, but fortunately, Windows 11 support will last for another few years.
 
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Sounds absolutely horrible😃



Edit: also if you haven't realized yet " AI " is just cover to push people towards " compute as a service " for the data center owners. That's the big goal .. get everyone on your subscription.
 
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you can complain all you want, but unless you run windows alternatives on your systems you'll end up running windows 12

microsoft will continue to work assuming consumers will eat whatever slop they serve
 
Definitely sounding like more and more people are going to be going to Linux if true.

I can't help but feel like this won't happen, but they've been making some questionable decisions left and right which make it all THAT much more believable.
 
Title of the article is a bit misleading, basically perfect click bait for knee-jerk reactions from people that don't actually read the article. Specifically, the subscription stuff is only for "advanced AI services". The title makes it seem like it's a subscription OS.

The biggest news is the NPU requirement.
 
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Do these companies really think people are all into the AI hype? No companies I work with want AI anywhere near their network.

What companies are that?

In corporate America almost everyone is using AI. Source: I work for a tech consulting firm and just about all of our contracts are now implementing some form of AI or they want devs who know how to use AI coding assistants and the like.
 
This sounds good?
Modular - good, can get rid of a bunch of shit I don't need/use. Local AI - sort of good, at least better than sending everything to MS, Subscription for advanced AI - eh, sure milk the people who want more AI, NPU requirement - the only really bad part as I don't have one in any of my PCs.
 
Yeah... I don't think enterprise customers are gonna go along with this. Companies are not going to put their entire infrastructure at the mercy of AI
 
That's a lot of words to say playing online are no longer free on PC. I'm not against anti cheating to be frank but we shall expect a substantial increase on Linux userbase to %20.
 
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I wonder what the conversion rate is on the current Office 365 scam (where you buy a Windows 11 desktop/laptop then one day in ransomware-like fashion it tells you the Office apps won't work unless you start paying the subscription).

They must feel confident that enough people will bend over and pay for Windows 12 once that trial period ends. Everyone else should be looking at the alternatives (Linux, Libre office, etc.).
 
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more subs, more AI, new CPU...this sounds horrible. What is this NPU even doing? Is that an extra chip just dedicated to AI calculations?
 
Define modular... because if that means that the system will be lighter and i can literally ignore all this AI bullshit, sure, why not? We evidently know this will not be the case thought...
 
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