



Uther (./3427) :Ils ont abandonné du coup Copilot ? (pas publiquement encore, mais en interne)
Microsoft n'essaie même plus de cacher que la plupart des équipes Microsoft en interne utilisent Claude pour le code.
vince (./3425) :Si ça se trouve c'est pour ça que le gars n'a pas pu faire un screenshot de Windows : il était sur un autre OS
Je rêverai qu'on découvre que c'est même pas copilot qui a été utilisé mais un concurrent...

Brunni (./3430) :Pas abandonné, mais il n'a clairement pas le succès espéré. Microsoft travaille actuellement encore sur Copilot notamment en le rendant plus indépendant de OpenAI.
Ils ont abandonné du coup Copilot ? (pas publiquement encore, mais en interne)


Last night I had the chance to sit down with a small group of Windows Insiders here in Seattle to listen, to answer questions, and to share more about where we’re headed. The Seattle meetup was the first of several stops our team will be making to engage in person, in more cities around the world, to connect with the Windows community.
Microsoft emphasizes the greatness of Windows App as it retires Remote Desktop client
Neowin
Last year, Microsoft announced that it is getting rid of the Remote Desktop app in favor of the Windows App (which isn't a confusing branding decision at all... sigh). For those unaware, the latter is a relatively recent addition that was introduced for back in September 2024. For the past couple of years, Microsoft has been encouraging customers to use Windows App for remote desktop access, and as it begins to prepare for the death of Remote Desktop for Windows, it has once again emphasized the greatness of its modern alternative.
(...)
Microsoft believes that all of these capabilities should together offer you a great experience as it begins to retire Remote Desktop app on Windows (MSI) and the web-based client this year. Its latest blog post mentions March 27 as the deadline, but this is likely in error since that date has already passed and Microsoft's previous announcement had tagged May 27 as the end of support date. Meanwhile, support for the Windows client in Azure Government and Azure 21Vianet clouds ends on September 28, 2026.
Breaking: Microsoft quietly removes Copilot branding from Notepad and Snipping Tool on Windows 11.
— Windows Latest (@WindowsLatest) April 9, 2026
Microsoft appears to be doing exactly what it promised after the Windows quality reset.
Notepad has now removed Copilot branding and replaced it with a simpler “Writing tools”… pic.twitter.com/eEmxoIZ2Wm

Microsoft now recommends 32GB of RAM as the future-proof 'no worries' config for gaming — 16GB becomes the new 'practical starting point' during the RAMageddon
Tom's Hardware
Microsoft recently published a new support document for gaming on Windows, serving as a guide for what hardware people should choose in 2026. Just a day later, that post has already been deleted because it recommended 16GB of RAM as the "practical starting point," while suggesting users go for 32GB if they want to future-proof their system. That means 32GB is no longer overkill according to the Windows maker.
Despite the grim outlook of the market, if you follow recent hardware trends, the data actually backs up this argument. Last year, before the RAMpocalypse ushered in, we covered September 2025's Steam Survey that showed 16GB configs falling behind in popularity while 32 GB systems were gaining notoriety. The lines still haven't overlapped, though, and 16 GB remains more common than 32GB, especially with the current situation in mind.
RAM has gotten significantly more expensive in the past few months, thanks to the AI boom snatching production lines. Manufactures are trying to come up with solutions to alleviate the crisis, such as the HUDIMMs proposed by ASRock, Intel, and TeamGroup. Despite prices flatlining as of late, DDR5 in particular is still out of reach for most DIY builders.
Uther (./3448) :Ah oui c'est ballot ça
C’est assez contradictoire avec les dires de Microsoft qui annoncaient qu’un des objectif du plan d’amérioration de Windows 11, c’est de réduire sa consomation mémoire (sans doute pour ne plus se retrouver derière Steam OS en terme de performance sur de nombreux jeux)
