Starting this month, some new personal computers that run
Microsoft’s Windows 11 operating system will have a special “Copilot key” that
launches the software giant’s AI chatbot.
Getting third-party computer manufacturers like Dell to add
an AI button to laptops is the latest move by Microsoft to capitalize on its
close partnership with ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and make itself a gateway for
applications of generative AI technology.
Although most people now connect to the internet — and many
AI applications — by phone rather than computer, it’s a symbolic kickoff to
what’s expected to be a competitive year as tech companies race to outdo each
other in AI applications even as they haven’t yet resolved all the ethical and
legal ramifications. The New York Times last month sued both OpenAI and
Microsoft alleging that tools like ChatGPT and Copilot — formerly known as Bing
Chat — are infringing on copyrighted news articles.
The keyboard redesign will be Microsoft’s biggest change to
PC keyboards since it introduced a special Windows key in the 1990s.
Microsoft’s four-squared logo design has evolved, but the key has been a
fixture on Windows-oriented keyboards for about three decades.
The newest AI button will be marked by the ribbon-like
Copilot logo and be located near the space bar. On some computers it will
replace the right “CTRL” key, while on others it will replace a menu key.
Microsoft is not the only company with customized keys.
Apple pioneered the concept in the 1980s with its “Command” key marked by a
looped square design (it also sported an Apple logo for a time). Google has a
search button on its Chromebooks and was first to experiment with an
AI-specific key to launch its voice assistant on its now-discontinued
Pixelbook.
But Microsoft has a much stronger hold on the broader PC
market through its licensing agreements with third-party manufacturers like
Lenovo, Dell and HP. About 82% of all desktop computers, laptops and
workstations run Windows, compared to 9% for Apple’s in-house operating system
and just over 6% for Google’s, according to market research firm IDC.
Dell Technologies on Thursday was the first to unveil a
Copilot key on its newest XPS laptops.
Microsoft hasn’t yet said which other computer-makers are
installing the Copilot button beyond Microsoft’s own in-house line of premium
Surface devices. It said some of the companies are expected to unveil their new
models at next week’s CES gadget show in Las Vegas. AP