Microsoft is betting big on artificial intelligence and generative AI at all levels of the company, from servers and Azure down to individual Windows PCs. And that big bet is about to become a lot more visible on Windows machines in the future, as Microsoft has instructed Windows OEMs to change their keyboard layouts to include a dedicated key for their Copilot AI service. Replacing the Menu key (or equivalent) on Windows 11 laptop keyboards, the repurposed key will instead provide direct access to Copilot, launching Microsoft's hub application for on-system AI.

The Copilot key's primary function is to activate the Copilot generative AI assistant in Windows 11, provided that it the system has Copilot installed and logged in to a Microsoft account. Otherwise, on PCs without access to Copilot, the key will instead default to opening up Windows Search, largely mirroring the existing functionality of the Windows key today.

Microsoft's decision to promote Copiot by making it a top-level, OEM-required key is a notable decision. The company has tinkered with repurposing the Windows and Menu keys at various times – most recently with desktop keyboards with dedicated Office and Emoji keys – but this is the most significant change to OEM keyboard requirements in quite some time. For most of the last two decades, the bulk of the changes there has been directing OEMs to use the latest Windows iconography. Ultimately, this strategic placement signifies the importance Microsoft places on the Copilot assistant, aiming to make it as accessible as possible to the end-user.

But the decision to dedicate a physical key to Copilot means that another key's function has needed to go, especially on cramped laptop keyboards. A Microsoft demonstration video showcased its placement between the right Alt button and arrow keys, a spot that was previously reserved for the Menu key on Microsoft Surface keyboards. These key changes also impact OEMs who instead used that physical key for another primary function such as a right-Ctrl, while offering Menu as a secondary function (e.g. Dell). Photos of the latest laptops from those vendors have shown that those keys have been repurposed to Copilot keys too, in-line with Microsoft's own claims that the Copilot key would be coming to non-Microsoft OEM systems as well.


Dell XPS 14 (2024) Keyboard

In any case, this is a solid example of the influence that Microsoft exerts over its OEM customers. The requirements for Windows certification give Microsoft a great deal of power over the design of a laptop, including, as we're now being reminded, the keyboards. Unfortunately, this means that Microsoft has seemingly also stripped OEMs of the flexibility to use the Menu key location for other roles.

This change in keyboard functionality comes as all of Microsoft's hardware partners have launched or are about to launch CPUs with neural processing units (NPUs), providing on-device acceleration for low-precision neural network inference. With PCs based on AMD's Ryzen Mobile 7000/8000, Intel's 14th Generation Core Ultra, and Qualcomm's Snapdragon processors all offering NPUs, Microsoft and its hardware partners are preparing for what they hope to be a major paradigm shift in PC capabilities and use-cases.

"Together [with AMD, Intel, and Qualcomm], we are putting new system architectures in place to power new Windows AI experiences bringing together the GPU, CPU, NPU and the cloud," a statement by Microsoft reads.

In general, this hardware integration — which involves NPU support and a dedicated keyboard key — is a significant step for Microsoft that highlights the company's commitment to making generative AI an integral part of computing. The Copilot key and acceleration by NPUs, unlike some past Microsoft initiatives, represents a direct hardware incorporation of its AI technology. These moves, alongside the development of AI-driven features for Windows sets a new precedent in the integration of AI into both PC software and hardware.

Meanwhile, with the current focus on laptops, it remains to be seen how the Copilot key will be implemented in traditional desktop keyboards. With the core ANSI 104 layout already full, it's likely that desktop keyboards will have their Menu keys repurposed and re-logoed as well.

Source: Microsoft

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  • thomasjkenney - Friday, January 5, 2024 - link

    There have been many times I have thought to myself "Wow...that Bill Gates is a real dick!"
  • PeachNCream - Friday, January 5, 2024 - link

    That hasn't crossed my mind in a long time. Microsoft has been a rather large company and Mr. Gates hasn't been involved in development for quite some time, but it isn't uncommon for people to assign responsibility for things Microsoft has done to Bill. It happens to that idiot Elon Musk guy and pretty much anyone the US elects as president.
  • thomasjkenney - Saturday, January 6, 2024 - link

    Heh! I had to deal with about a decade of Bill Gates. F#(< that guy. His other sin is imparting his various 'business strategies' to his successors.
  • FunBunny2 - Saturday, January 6, 2024 - link

    " His other sin is imparting his various 'business strategies' to his successors."

    if Mitch hadn't decided to put 1-2-3 on MS/DOS only (and IBM hadn't been so stupid to not demand an exclusive on QDOS, and other idiots who gave him the farm), Bill would still be a nothing assembly coder in Albuquerque.
  • GeoffreyA - Sunday, January 7, 2024 - link

    Weren't a lot of the bad decisions owing to Steve Ballmer?
  • ballsystemlord - Saturday, January 6, 2024 - link

    I've only gone "Wow" when I see how awesome some of the none-native programs and games have become, but then I was dealing with win 3.X at the time so my reaction is a bit dated.
  • taisingera - Friday, January 5, 2024 - link

    What will this key do when Linux is installed? The current menu key functions as the right click to get the menu options on Linux.
  • ballsystemlord - Saturday, January 6, 2024 - link

    When you press it the kernel will panic and the system will freeze up. (ha ha)

    More seriously, Linux will probably not change at all in it's behavior because it sounds like the "new" version of the key is just a logo switch coupled with a SW change on the Windowz side of the matter.
  • hubick - Saturday, January 6, 2024 - link

    Microsoft, I don't want your frickin AI, and I don't want the frickin key. Frick off.
  • abufrejoval - Monday, January 8, 2024 - link

    My primary keyboard (a 1990 IBM PS/2) doesn't have a Windows key, either.

    I didn't really want to change from the original IBM PC keyboard, which still had the Ctrl-key where it's supposed to be (I NEVER NEEDED TO YELL SO MUCH I REQUIRED A Caps-Lock on a a prime finger position!!) and the ESC-key on the cursor-pad, where it belongs (who needs a number-pad when computers are meant for programming?).

    It also had the function keys on the left, where my pinky could find them without looking, but why use 8-10 function keys when you can have far more Ctrl-combos without leaving your home-keys?

    We weren't mouse-mushied or tap-beddadled and kept our fingers right where they belong back then...

    But when nobody supported the original PC electrical interface beyond early 80386 mainboard any more, there was just no choice and I remapped that pesty Caps-Lock into a proper Ctrl for decades, never used the other two, because that would either require taking your eyes off the screen or some serious finger acrobatics, older hands feel ever less inclined to perform.

    Whenever a company feels they can govern the Personal Computing space via a product they make, it needs to be taken from their hands: the only sovereign in that space are the consumer citizens.

    A co-pilot, whose obvious ambition is to turn Personal Computer users into passengers who are continually pressed into paying for using what they own by someone who they hired as a doorman and janitor is perverse at the very least, an obvious breach of contract, immoral and illegal for sure.

    And if weren't illegal already, it definitely needs to be made so, unless consumers give informed consent without discrimination.

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