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Microsoft divides Windows userbase for a second time

Posted on June 18, 2024June 18, 2024 by Martin Brinkmann

The last couple of years have been a difficult ride for the majority of Windows users. It all began with the release of Windows 11. Microsoft released the new version of Windows back in October 2021 to the public.

Several months before that release, it made it abundantly clear that Windows 11 would ship with new hardware requirements.

These requirements, particularly the need for a TPM chip and a relatively modern processor, blocked part of the userbase from upgrading to Windows 11 officially.

Granted, enthusiasts found ways to bypass the requirements and upgrade devices to Windows 11, but the majority of users does not know about Rufus or ways to bypass the requirements.

This divided the Windows userbase for the first time ever since Windows came to be. Hundreds of million of devices with Windows 10 cannot be upgraded to Windows 11 according to estimates. Microsoft, at least, gives customers an option to extend support by up to three years, but this comes at a price.

The second divide: Copilot+ PCs

Microsoft is dividing the Windows userbase again, less than three years after the official launch of Windows 11. Now, it is affecting the Windows 11 userbase.

The new Copilot+ PC type has different hardware requirements again. This time, requirements include a neural processing unit for AI processing on the device among other things.

While Microsoft won’t prevent regular Windows 11 systems from upgrading to Windows 11 version 24H2, it will block certain features on these devices.

In other words, if you do not have a Copilot+ PC, you won’t get all the features of Windows 11 anymore. While that is been the case for smaller features, including Auto DRM or DirectStorage, Microsoft is introducing a new dimension here.

Major features, including the controversial Recall feature, but also smaller features, such as features of the default image editor Paint, are Copilot+ PC exclusives. If you do not have one, you won’t be able to use these features, even if you wanted to.

Closing Words

Arguably, the second divide isn’t as major as the first. Windows 11 customers can continue to use their devices at least. Still, with a large number of Windows 10 customers left without any official options from Microsoft, and most current Windows 11 customers without access to many of the upcoming AI features, one has to wonder whether that is the best course of action.

If Microsoft would have known about the rise of AI in 2021, it could have waited with the release of Windows 11 until 2024. Or, it could have allowed Windows 10 devices to upgrade to Windows 11. All of these options were not really practicable from Microsoft’s point of view. It could have done that, but it wanted Windows 11 devices to be on modern hardware only. The rise of AI in 2023 came out of nowhere, practically.

Devices need enough processing power, using NPU chips, to compute certain AI tasks on the device. While it would still be possible to allow devices without AI chips to make use of these features, it would probably be unbearable slow.

In closing, Microsoft seems to have moved itself into a corner with the release of Windows 11 and the enforcement of new system requirements. The sudden rise of AI services and features require another round of adjustments to the system requirements.

Still, this is going to be a problem for Microsoft in the short run. What will all the Windows 10 customers do who cannot upgrade their devices to Windows 11?

Tags: windows 11
Category: Windows

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4 thoughts on “Microsoft divides Windows userbase for a second time”

  1. Tachy says:
    June 18, 2024 at 3:31 pm

    “Divide and Conquer”, the oldest trick in the book.

    I don’t understand why ‘more power’ would be needed. I currently have an Intel i9-14900K and I rarely see it goes over 10% usage. If I do see higher usage it’s because some task is being done 10x faster then my last CPU could do it.

    Reply
    1. boris says:
      June 19, 2024 at 2:50 pm

      If processor power goes regularly above 25% on newer Intel processors, that means that you are playing an AAA Video Game or running Adobe Photoshop or something went wrong with Windows or some program (Avast in my case) is crushing the system, and it needs to be uninstalled/reinstalled. Maybe other users know more examples, but that’s all from my experience and people I know experience.

      Reply
  2. Doc Fuddled says:
    June 18, 2024 at 5:09 pm

    I consider Microsoft leadership arrogant and inept, so I have Windows 10 as debloated as I can and limit updating to a minimum. It still serves me well as I continue to learn Linux.

    Reply
  3. Bobo says:
    June 18, 2024 at 5:53 pm

    The only one that has any use of these new Windows features is that guy in the “One” video by Metallica. Then again, he would propbably morse-code “kill me” harder than ever before..

    Reply

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