What Happened: You know that handy “Advanced Paste” trick in Microsoft’s PowerToys? Well, it’s getting a massive brain upgrade that doesn’t need the internet.
- With the new 0.96 update rolling out now, this feature has gone fully local. It’s using your computer’s own power (specifically the NPU) to handle the AI magic, thanks to integration with tools like Ollama and Foundry Local.
- Plus, it’s cleaned up the look. You now get a much nicer menu where you can actually see your clipboard content and pick which AI brain you want to use – whether that’s a local model or a cloud one like Google’s Gemini, Mistral, or Azure OpenAI.
Microsoft
Why Is This Important: This is actually a pretty big pivot. Until now, most “smart” features had to phone home to a server to think.
- By moving this to your actual device, Microsoft is cutting the cord. It means no more waiting for a server to reply, and crucially, no monthly API bills for the heavy lifting.
- It’s part of a huge shift where companies are realizing that running AI right on our own hardware is cheaper, faster, and frankly, just makes more sense for the future of Windows.
Windows
Why Should I Care: If you’re the type who is constantly copying, pasting, and tweaking text all day, this is going to speed you up.
- Since the AI lives on your laptop now, you can summarize a giant document or translate a text snippet instantly, even if your Wi-Fi is down.
- But the real win here is privacy. Because the data never leaves your machine, you don’t have to stress about accidentally pasting a password or sensitive work email into a cloud bot. It stays yours.
What’s Next: Expect to see a lot more of this. As our computers get more powerful chips built-in, Microsoft is likely going to give other tools the same “local AI” treatment.
- We’re probably looking at a future where your PC understands images or voice commands without ever needing to talk to the cloud.
- Advanced Paste is just the first domino to fall in a move toward a totally private, AI-powered Windows experience.