• SabinStargem@lemmy.today
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    23 hours ago

    I don’t mind the idea of CoPilot. The problem is that CoPilot works for Microsoft, not for me.

    It would be cool if the OS-AI could take a look at the Windows Event Viewer, find out everything that is misbehaving, and figure out if there are actionable fixes. Alas, it will take further AI and harness development before that sort of thing is practical. Probably several years from now?

    0000

    In any case, you can uninstall the AI modules of Windows, and turn them off. Of course, Microsoft will try to make an uninvited return. I use the paid version of ShutUp10 to have it automatically uninstall CoPilot and to reassert my rules whenever Microsoft tries to make an unwanted change.

    I recommend ShutUp10 for a pretty simple reason: It has a simple GUI and explains the impact of the options you tweak. For people who aren’t interested in becoming a master technician, that is very helpful for just getting on with one’s day without sacrificing privacy.

  • Hal-5700X@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    How to disable Copilot

    For Pro, Enterprise, or Education users

    Press Windows + R, type gpedit.msc, and press Enter. Navigate to User Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > Windows Copilot. Double-click “Turn off Windows Copilot,” select “Enabled,” then click Apply and OK. Restart your computer for the changes to take effect.

    For Home users

    Home users without access to the Group Policy Editor can disable Copilot via the Windows Registry. Press Windows + R, type regedit, and press Enter. Navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Windows. Create a new key named WindowsCopilot if it does not exist. Inside this key, create a new DWORD (32-bit) value named TurnOffWindowsCopilot and set its value to 1. Restart your computer to apply the change.

  • Brujones@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Fun story from my win11 work machine. I’ve de-copiloted it to the best of my ability. Even so, ‘ai.exe’ was always running, consuming more RAM than I was comfortable with, and if I killed it, it would respawn.

    I found i can delete the folder it resides in with no ill effect. But a few times a week, a process would recreate it.

    System owned the parent folder but for some reason I was unable to revoke its write permissions. So instead, I created a junction so that anything written to the ai folder would instead write to a folder that I had sole ownership of.

    This worked, except it ended up causing kernel failures and bootloader issues. Big yikes.

    • M137@lemmy.today
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      24 hours ago

      This is what shows they’re scared of people not using it as much as they need. They literally make your system crash if you try to fully disable it.
      They’ve invested too much to let it be a choice, no matter how hard it would be to make that choice.

      • Brujones@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        I haven’t figured out how do make a script that can delete a directory that needs admin rights. Instead, I created a script that pings the directory once per minute and tosses up a notification if it exists. Then I just go and delete it. It’s good enough for me, since it only happens 2x-3x per week.

        • OwOarchist@pawb.social
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          2 days ago

          I haven’t figured out how do make a script that can delete a directory that needs admin rights.

          Yeah … me neither, I guess. I know how to do that on Linux easily enough (doesn’t even need a proper script, just a root cron job), but not sure how on Windows.

  • terabyterex@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    everything else aside. please stop with this misunderstanding of ram. unused ram is wasted ram. the OS will give what is available. its good at managing who needs what. the problem ariaes is when an app isnt letting go of ram and taking more. so unless you have an app that needs ram and ia t getting it, its no an issue.

    all that aside… i do t think a gig of ram for an ai to analyze your entire pc and running processes is absurd.

    • Rhaedas@fedia.io
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      2 days ago

      Yeah, the RAM isn’t the problem if you have it, it’s the CPU/GPU cycles to do what could be done with simpler tools.

    • OwOarchist@pawb.social
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      2 days ago

      unused ram is wasted ram. the OS will give what is available

      But RAM used by this ai bullshit will not be listed as ‘available’ to the OS and cannot be used for other things.

    • Kubiac@discuss.tchncs.de
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      2 days ago

      Copilot can’t analyze your PC or the data on it. It’s just a fancy web page, that hogs too much resources.

      • Albbi@piefed.ca
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        2 days ago

        The Copilot app for Windows also supports some additional features not available elsewhere, including:

        Windows shortcut key
        Wake word ("Hey Copilot")
        Copilot Vision
        File search
        Take a screenshot
        View web content
        Windows Settings support
        

        Source

    • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      Yep, plus, who is running Windows on a machine where 1GB of RAM is precious?

      My work laptop has 16GB. It runs the full suite of Microsoft bloat (CoPilot, Teams, Edge, OneDrive) plus various antivirus and work security/monitoring tools constantly. I usually also have Outlook open, ~5 active tabs in Edge (with up to 20 inactive), an RDP session going, Excel, VSCode (often with long running scripts going), OneNote, Notepad++, and either YouTube for music or a teams meeting with video.

      I’ve never had to close anything for the sake of performance except when I was installing a big program, doing a deep search through tens of thousands of files using very inefficient PowerShell code, while having all the rest open.


      I’m not saying CoPilot using a gig of RAM at rest is OK, I’m just saying it’s not the huge performance impact being implied.

      • fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        On a machine with only 8 gigs of ram that 1 gig is very useful. 16gb+ not so much, but 8 gigs gives you about 4 gigs of useable ram before windows starts offloading stuff.

        • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 day ago

          But that’s kind of my point. 8GB was a good amount of RAM for heavy use with Windows a decade ago. It’s unfortunate with the current costs of RAM, but 16GB is kind of the floor for modern computing with Windows.

          I know the struggle. Around a decade ago I took an Android programming course. I was using a laptop on Windows 7 with only 8GB of RAM. It was fine for most of my other courses and for the light gaming I did on it, as long as I didn’t have much else open. But Android development uses Android Studio. A Java IDE built in Java as IntelliJ, with a whole bunch of awesome but RAM guzzling features. Then Google strapped all their additional Android shit on top. Then to test the app you made, you were supposed to run an Android emulator that used at least 4GB of RAM.

          I ended up having to borrow someone’s old Android phone for testing, and I had to use another program to shut off all other programs and Windows Services while I worked. And saved up, and upgraded to 16GB of RAM, because it’s what I needed for how I was using my machine.

          It sucks. Developers, especially those making shit built into an OS, need to be far more aware of the resources their programs use and optimize better.

          But at the end of the day our options are limited and we have to accept the changing times.

          Or work around them. There are plenty of flavors of Linux if you need something lighter, or options to strip down Windows like tiny11 or Windows Ameliorated for 10.

  • curbstickle@anarchist.nexus
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    2 days ago

    Its generally pretty easy for me to know what’s slowing down my work laptop.

    Microsoft Teams is the hogzilla of resource hogs.