Microsoft's latest Copilot idea is a pinnable sidebar that steals your screen real estate

DragonSlayer101

Posts: 983   +14
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In context: Windows users have made their frustrations clear over Microsoft's relentless push to embed Copilot throughout the operating system, yet the chorus of complaints has failed to persuade the company to cut back on its Copilot shenanigans. The latest experiment sees a docked Copilot sidebar that can be pinned to the edge of the Windows desktop, significantly cutting into the screen space available to other applications.

Granted, the core Copilot experience remains unchanged in the latest update, but according to Windows Latest, a new drop-down menu on the title bar introduces four snapping options, letting users dock the assistant to the left or right edge of the screen or keep it in a standard resizable window. The existing picture-in-picture mode carries over as well.

While docking Copilot could have obvious appeal for heavy users, the main trade-off is the reduced desktop space for other apps. On an ultrawide or multi-monitor setup that trade-off is manageable, but on a typical 15-inch, 16:9 laptop display the loss of screen real estate is harder to ignore.

Thankfully, Copilot still launches in a floating window by default, meaning users can simply overlook the docking option entirely. Whether Microsoft leaves that default in place is another matter, given that the company seems desperate for its AI assistant to gain traction and it's willing to bother some of its vast Windows user base to do so.

That said, user resistance has extracted some concessions. Just last week, Microsoft confirmed it would allow remapping of the dedicated Copilot key on newer Windows laptops. The company has also reportedly halted efforts to integrate Copilot into Windows notifications and the Settings app following major pushback from users.

Those changes appear to reflect a broader recalibration in Microsoft's Windows strategy, with renewed emphasis on improving system stability and addressing longstanding bugs over half-baked features that users never requested. While no one expects Microsoft to abandon its Copilot ambitions, users are hoping that whatever comes next earns its place in the OS by being genuinely useful, not just imposed on them.

Image source: Windows Latest

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If this window doesn't even dock until you dock it yourself, this complaint seems overblown. Maybe save the scorn for when Microsoft earns it (usually not too long a wait.)
 
This is an article about .. nothing really.
What's pinnable is also unpinnable, who doesn't need it will not pin it - there, the screen real estate 'problem' solved.
 
Anything which you can also easily remove is newsworthy, because MS has a reputation for forcing software on users without any easy way to remove it.
This is also newsworthy, IMO, as Microsoft has said they were going to lessen the amount of Copilot apps in W11, that has yet to happen as many Copilot things were simply renamed with the Copilot logo removed. MS seems to just be changing things around with the hopes that people wouldn't notice.
And no, having to use Group Policy Editor and use debloat scripts isn't really a fix for a paid OS. It's only a fix for the most determined enthusiasts who are attached to Windows for Windows only applications, or haven't used Linux in 10 years.
 
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Microsoft's latest Copilot idea is a pinnable sidebar that steals your screen real estate...

I'm honestly curious, @DragonSlayer101 ... have you ever seen *any* window on your screen that didn't "steal real estate" from other applications?

In the meantime, I give you this educational link for future edification.
 
Microsoft, yet again, polishes a turd in an effort to convince gullible users that a turd is not a turd. :rolleyes:
 
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