I first ran into the Copilot integration in Notepad a couple of days ago and immediately turned it right the fuck off.

In November, Microsoft began testing an update that allowed users to rewrite or summarize text in Notepad using generative AI. Another preview update today takes it one step further, allowing you to write AI-generated text from scratch with basic instructions (the feature is called Write, to differentiate it from the earlier Rewrite).

Like Rewrite and Summarize, Write requires users to be signed into a Microsoft Account, because using it requires you to use your monthly allotment of Microsoft’s AI credits. Per this support page, users without a paid Microsoft 365 subscription get 15 credits per month. Subscribers with Personal and Family subscriptions get 60 credits per month instead.

Microsoft notes that all AI features in Notepad can be disabled in the app’s settings, and obviously, they won’t be available if you use a local account instead of a Microsoft Account.

  • Bezier
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    935 days ago

    “Barely maintained”

    Notepad was a very simple application. Did it even need more effoet put into it? Looks more like they fixed what was not broken.

      • unalivejoy
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        105 days ago

        They should’ve stopped at support for utf-8 encoding and unix line endings.

    • @taxet_@sopuli.xyz
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      185 days ago

      This. It needed absolutely nothing added to it. You could write text files, what more did anyone ever need from it? The app was done. It was ready.

      This is a concept that is not even in the vocabulary of IT companies these days and I can understand it for complex systems that have dependencies up the wazoo but notepad was just a notepad and that was good enough.

      • @dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de
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        135 days ago

        There were a few things that it eventually got but lacked for way too long like support for UNIX line endings.

    • @GreyEyedGhost@lemmy.ca
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      115 days ago

      It was definitely lacking in core areas. Large files, better search, possibly spell check (and why isn’t spell check core Windows functionality?). It also could have used better handling for non-Windows text files. But overall, yes, this wasn’t a program that needed a dedicated team to manage or improve.

      • The_Decryptor
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        4 days ago

        (and why isn’t spell check core Windows functionality?)

        It actually is, introduced in Windows 8, it’s just taken devs ages to actually start using it (Notepad only got it last year, 12 years after it was introduced)

        • @GreyEyedGhost@lemmy.ca
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          14 days ago

          If Windows was actually good, you could have it take a question and paste the results into Notepad without having to add AI there. If it was really good, the AI segment would be optional.