Windows Weekly 940: The Donkey Always Wins - podcast episode cover

Windows Weekly 940: The Donkey Always Wins

Jul 09, 20252 hr 42 min
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Episode description

It's been a big year for Windows 11 updates. This month is at least semi-manageable! Also, a few more bits from the layoffs. Plus, Amiga Forever 11 and C64 11 Forever help you live in the past!

Patch Tuesday

  • Copilot+ PC only: Ask Copilot action for Click to Do
  • 24H2 only: Show smaller Taskbar icons. Screen curtain feature in Narrator. Settings home page for commercial customer
  • 23H2 and 24H2: Windows Share shows preview when sharing web content. Beginning of PC migration feature in Windows Backup. More changes for EU users to meet DMA requirements, mostly Edge related
  • Windows 10: EU/DMA updates as above

More Windows 11

  • WE DID IT! Windows 11 is now in use on more PCs than Windows 10. It's time for Windows 12!
  • No new Insider features but some bug fixes in Canary
  • Microsoft Edge keeps getting more responsive

Microsoft 365 and AI

  • Teams gets threading in Channels about three years later than needed
  • Google brought its Veo 3 video generation model to all AI Pro subscribers last week, and now it's bringing that and two other big AI features to Pixel
  • Perplexity just launched its AI web browser

Xbox and gaming

  • No, Phil Spencer is not retiring
  • Romero Games forced to cancel Xbox shooter, lay off 100 employees
  • Warcraft Rumble Mobile won't get any more updates
  • Xbox angst in the wake of last week's layoffs is mostly undeserved
  • Xbox fans keep finding new ways to complain - Most of the game/studio closures we know about were well-deserved. If anything, Microsoft let these things continue for too long with no viable deliverables
  • But what is Xbox? Looking at the platform and what Microsoft has done under Phil Spencer paints a very different picture than all the moaning we see on social media
  • Game Pass was key to getting Satya Nadella to keep Xbox going, but after the Activision acquisition, the day and date promise was unworkable. After the changes and price hikes, it's possible that Game Pass has peaked.
  • Microsoft uploaded an out of date version of Call of Duty: WWII to the Store and hilarity ensues
  • Sony to publish a game for Xbox for the first time
  • Epic Games quietly settled with Samsung ahead of today's Unpacked event - but not with Google

Tips and picks

  • Tip of the week: Office 365 for IT Pros 2026 Edition is now available
  • App pick of the week: Microsoft Edge
  • RunAs Radio this week: Building Real Software using PowerApps with Luise Freese
  • Brown liquor pick of the week: Bolster Road Maple Rye Whiskey

Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell

Download or subscribe to Windows Weekly at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly

Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com

The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin.

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Transcript

Privacy vs. Convenience: How AI Browsers May Change Everything Primary Navigation Podcasts Club Blog Subscribe Sponsors More… Tech Privacy vs. Convenience: How AI Browsers May Change Everything

Jul 10th 2025

Generated by AI, reviewed by humans.

The latest episode of Windows Weekly delivered a fascinating and somewhat unsettling discussion about the future of web browsing, artificial intelligence, and what it all means for how we interact with the internet. Hosts Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell didn't hold back in their analysis of emerging AI-powered browsers and the potential consequences for users.

Perplexity Launches Comet: A New AI Browser with Concerning Ambitions

The conversation centered around Perplexity's announcement of their new AI browser called "Comet," currently available only to their $200/month subscribers. But it wasn't just the premium pricing that caught the hosts' attention; CEO Aravind Srinivas had a remarkably candid admission about the browser's data collection intentions.

"We plan to use all the context to build a better user profile," Srinivas stated, explaining that the browser would track everything users do online to sell hyper-personalized ads. Paul Thurrott noted the irony: "We plan to use all the context to build a better user profile and maybe, you know, through our discover feed we could show some ads there."

The Evolution of Browsing: From Surfing to AI Agents

The hosts explored how AI is fundamentally changing what it means to "browse" the web. Thurrott painted a picture of a future where AI agents handle the heavy lifting: "You might have a natural language conversation with whatever bots or agents or whatever you want to call them, and they just kind of do it for you."

This shift represents more than just a technological advancement—it's a fundamental change in how we consume information. The traditional concept of browsing, literally moving from site to site and reading content, may become obsolete as AI summarizes, filters, and pre-processes everything for us.

The Uncomfortable Truth About Privacy Trade-offs

Leo Laporte raised a crucial point about society's acceptance of privacy erosion: "We've already made this kind of implicit deal with the devil." The hosts discussed how users have become accustomed to trading personal data for convenience, with Thurrott noting that people often respond to privacy concerns with resignation: "If I'm going to see advertising, I'd rather see something that's relevant to me."

But the hosts weren't buying into this rationalization. Laporte pushed back: "How about we don't see advertising? Would that be an acceptable outcome?"

The Enshittification of AI: A Race Against Time

The conversation took a darker turn as the hosts discussed the inevitable "enshittification" of AI services. Richard Campbell pointed out that AI companies are currently burning through massive amounts of capital without profitable business models: "None of those companies are making money right now, they're on a burn rate that's going to take them out if they don't find their way."

This financial pressure creates a dangerous dynamic where quality AI services may quickly degrade as companies scramble to monetize their offerings. Thurrott made a sobering observation: "It is reasonable to assume that the enshittification of AI will also occur at a rate that we've never seen with technology."

The Skills We're Losing: A Generation Unprepared

Perhaps the most thought-provoking part of the discussion touched on the broader implications of AI dependency. Thurrott admitted his own concerns: "I'm a lifetime reader. I have a hard time reading long things now." He referenced Isaac Asimov's Foundation trilogy, where advanced civilizations become entirely dependent on technology they no longer understand.

The hosts worried about a future where human skills atrophy in the face of AI convenience. "We're just going to be like the WALL-E guys, like the fat things on our ladders floating around," Thurrott mused, referencing the dystopian future depicted in Pixar's WALL-E.

Google's Circle to Search: The Gateway Drug to AI Browsing

The discussion also covered Google's Circle to Search feature, which allows users to search for anything on their screen by simply circling it. Now integrated with AI mode for Pixel users in the US and India, this feature represents the evolution from basic image recognition to conversational AI interactions.

For gaming, this technology promises to eliminate the need to leave apps to search for help, providing contextual assistance without breaking immersion. It's a preview of how AI will seamlessly integrate into our daily digital interactions.

The Resistance is Futile (But Understandable)

Thurrott acknowledged the natural resistance to these changes: "This is the argument that someone would have made when they owned one of the first vehicles and they knew how to fix it and then cars got good enough, you didn't have to be a mechanic."

But Leo Laporte wasn't entirely convinced this analogy holds. He expressed concern about the "enshittification of everything," questioning whether we're witnessing genuine progress or just "putting crap in my browser for no good reason."

The emergence of AI browsers like Comet, alongside innovations from Arc, Dia, and Opera's Neon browser, signals a new chapter in the browser wars. These aren't just new interfaces; they're fundamentally different approaches to how we interact with the web.

The question isn't whether AI will transform browsing, but how quickly and whether users will maintain any meaningful control over the process. As Campbell noted, every company wants their product to be your "sovereign app" and the first thing you touch when you use your device.

The Bottom Line

The Windows Weekly hosts painted a picture of a future that's both exciting and concerning. AI browsers promise unprecedented convenience and capability, but at the cost of privacy, autonomy, and potentially our ability to think critically about information.

As we stand on the brink of this transformation, the conversation from Windows Weekly serves as both a preview of what's coming and a warning about what we might lose along the way.

Want to hear the full discussion and dive deeper into these topics? Listen to the complete Windows Weekly episode where Leo Laporte, Richard Campbell, and Paul Thurrott explore these issues in greater detail, along with their analysis of the latest developments in Windows, Xbox, and the broader Microsoft landscape.

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Jul 9 2025 - The Donkey Always Wins
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