What is a Microsoft Copilot+ PC, how does it work, and how can you get one?

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When Microsoft started inserting Copilot, its AI chatbot, into Windows 11 laptops at the beginning of 2024, there was one detail that suggested a big change was coming.

Copilot now has dedicated button on the keyboards of new PCs designed to work with it. This was the first time a new key had been added since Windows 95 introduced the Windows key that pops up the Start menu.

Now, Microsoft has announced the next step on the journey that began with that single key, the Copilot+ PC. It makes a small change to the way we think of our computers. By that, we mean the software now defines the hardware, instead of the other way around. But it may leave some feeling left out – especially if you’ve bought a new laptop recently.

What is a Copilot+ PC?

According to Microsoft, “Copilot+ PCs are the fastest, most intelligent Windows PCs ever built,” which sounds like the sort of thing that’s been said every time a new PC line has been launched dating back to the ‘90s.
But underneath their casings, something has changed in this new generation of personal computers. Alongside the CPU, GPU, RAM, SSD and other TLAs that make up the modern PC, there’s a new one: NPU. This stands for Neural Processing Unit. They’re for accelerating AI applications locally on the PC, instead of offloading the workload to a cloud server somewhere, which is slower and has privacy concerns.
What hardware do Copilot+ PCs use?
The first PCs to be announced for the Copilot+ standard all use Qualcomm Snapdragon X series CPUs, a totally different architecture from the Intel Core and AMD Ryzen chips we’re used to. There are two versions of these chips – Snapdragon X Plus and the more performance-based Snapdragon X Elite, using Qualcomm’s brand-new Oryon CPU, based around a design that Qualcomm acquired by buying startup Nuvia in 2021.
It mirrors what Apple did with its M-series chips, breaking from Intel and using the ARM architecture, more commonly seen in phones and tablets, in pursuit of both performance gains and longer battery life. It worked for Apple, so it could do equally well for the PC. This is especially true Qualcomm has repeatedly claimed its chips are even better than Apple’s M3 design used in latest-gen Macs (though surely soon replaced by the M4 series used in the latest iPad Pro).
How true is this claim? Well, it’s partly true. Snapdragon X Elite is very powerful and outpaces Apple M3 in multi-core benchmarks. However, for single-core tasks, M3 remains around 15% speedier. Apple’s 10 core GPU is also faster than Qualcomm’s Adreno graphics processor.
Because they’re basically phone chips, battery life of Copilot+ PCs has been drastically improved, too – these range vastly, though. The new Surface Pro seems to be able to manage around 15 hours of real-world battery life but many other models promise a lot more than this with upwards of 20-25 hours – the proof will be in the pudding when we renew them.

Apart from the new chip, battery life, and the extra key on the keyboard, the big changes come in the software. Microsoft is baking its AI into just about every aspect of Windows, and other software creators are following suit.
What this switch in PC architecture means is that, if you’ve bought a PC with an AMD or Intel chip recently, it won’t get to be in the Copilot+ standard.
All the Microsoft Copilot+ PC announced so far
Many companies such as HP and Acer have already announcing their Copilot+ PCs. So, the next computer you buy could well support the new tech. All of the devices shown at the time of writing have been laptops or two-in-one devices, but the desktop PC is unlikely to get left behind. Here’s the latest list of launched models.

Acer Swift 14 AI
ASUS Vivobook S 15
Dell Inspiron 14 Plus
Dell Inspiron 14
Dell XPS 13
Dell Latitude 7455
Dell Latitude 5455
HP OmniBook X AI PC
HP EliteBook Ultra G1q AI PC 
Lenovo T14s Gen 6
Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x
Microsoft Surface Laptop
Microsoft Surface Pro
Samsung Galaxy Book4 Edge

What are the key Copilot+ PC features?

So you’ve got your new PC, and the new version of Windows. Then what? Well, there will be some AI-powered image creation and editing tools built right into the OS. Plus, there’s the ability to adjust the lighting or add creative filters to video calls. This includes the illusion of maintaining eye contact with the camera even though you’re looking elsewhere. Nvidia Broadcast can already do this last one, but requires one of the company’s GPUs to run and can look a bit uncanny in use, so it will be interesting to see if the Copilot+ version appears more natural.

Then there’s Cocreator, a drawing app that generates artwork from your initial sketches. And you will be able to generate live captions for any media you’re playing. Windows claims that it can translate more than 40 languages to English subtitles instantly. This is all without having to use the cloud.
Recall

The big announcement, however, has to be Recall. This appears to be a massive, searchable history of everything you’ve done with your PC, including voice chats, web searches, documents and emails. It allows you to go back to something you were doing months ago and have half forgotten about, either by scrolling through the timeline or by searching using object recognition or keywords. After some concerns as to how this feature works, it has been delayed and will come to Copilot+ PCs later in the year.
AI smarts are also going to become more prevalent in other applications. Companies such as Adobe are already integrating it into the likes of Photoshop. It’s also beginning to appear in apps like the pro video editing tool DaVinci Resolve, music app djay Pro, and animation programs such as Cephable. In many cases, it takes over time-consuming jobs such as accurately selecting objects in images and video so that they can be removed or manipulated. As the number of AI PCs out there increases, so the apps that take advantage of them, and the things they can do, will multiply.
Do I really need a Copilot+ PC?
Probably not right now. Especially if you’re content with the way your current PC works. But they’re going to become hard to avoid. Apple’s experience with the M chips in its MacBooks and other computers has shown that the energy-efficient new processors leave nothing behind when it comes to crunching through data. The extended battery life you get from them is nother great bonus in a portable machine.
Microsoft has tried this sort of thing before. It tried to reinvent Windows 98 so that it worked more like the web, with an Active Desktop full of web content and a single click to open folders and applications. But it didn’t catch on. This is why you still have a background image and double click on things today, but with AI set to revolutionise the world of computing just as the easy communication capabilities of the internet did, even if we’re still not completely sure what shape that revolution will take, these new PCs look like a big first step into that world.

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