Ai Capabilities
The latest Ai Capabilities coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
Microsoft 365 Copilot Chat Metrics Coming for Unlicensed Users — Admin Action Required
Microsoft is adding Copilot Chat adoption metrics for unlicensed users to the Viva-powered Copilot Dashboard, with a preview in October 2025 and general rollout set for November 2026. IT administrators must now decide whether to enable, limit, or disable these insights, balancing AI adoption goals against privacy and compliance risks. A practical five-step guide helps organizations prepare policies, exclusion lists, and validation plans before the deadline.
Apple's AI Server Setbacks Trigger Uncharacteristic Interest in Big-Ticket Chip Deals
Apple is actively courting AI chip companies for potential acquisitions as its internal M2 Ultra servers prove inadequate for large AI models and its next-gen Baltra chip is delayed. The shift, reported by The Information, signals a strategic pivot toward larger deals, with implications for the entire AI hardware ecosystem. While Windows users face no direct impact, IT pros should monitor supply chain and talent market effects.
Microsoft’s GPT-4o Retirement Countdown Is Already Ticking—Here’s Your Migration Playbook
Microsoft has started blocking new deployments of GPT-4o and GPT-4o-mini on Azure Foundry, well ahead of the October 1, 2026 retirement date. Existing deployments still work, but the race to migrate is on. This article explains what the freeze means, why the suggested GPT-4.1-mini replacement for GPT-4o-mini is a two-week trap, and provides a practical step-by-step plan to inventory, validate, and safely cut over to GPT-5.1 before the final cutoff.
Claude Code Rumor Sparks Confusion: Are Live Artifacts and Screen Reader Mode Coming to Windows?
A StartupHub.ai report claims Claude Code is getting live artifacts, a screen reader mode, and other features, but Anthropic hasn't confirmed anything. Windows developers should treat the report as unverified and avoid changing any configurations until official documentation is updated.
Anthropic’s Cost-Cutting Playbook: Let Fable 5 Plan, Let Cheaper Models Execute
Anthropic has detailed a cost-saving pattern where developers use its most powerful Claude model, Fable 5, as a high-level planner while routing routine work to cheaper models like Sonnet 5 and Haiku. The approach can slash token costs for agentic workflows and is especially relevant for Windows teams building internal automation tools. The company provides evaluation suites and cost-management features to operationalize this multi-model orchestration.
Pentagon Designates Anthropic a National Security Risk in Escalating AI Contract Dispute
The Pentagon designated Anthropic a supply-chain risk on March 4, 2026, after the AI firm refused to let the military use its models for all lawful purposes without restrictions against mass surveillance and autonomous weapons. A federal court granted a partial injunction, but separate authority keeps parts of the ban in effect, forcing defense contractors to audit AI dependencies and segment their environments immediately.
Anthropic Adds Claude Fable 5 to Max and Team Premium Plans Permanently; Pro Users Left With Credits
Starting July 20, Anthropic will permanently include Claude Fable 5 in Max and Team Premium subscriptions at 50% of usage limits, while Pro and Team Standard users must keep paying via credits with a one-time $100 credit. The move ends weeks of temporary rollouts and gives higher-tier subscribers predictable access to the advanced model for coding, knowledge work, and agentic tasks.
AI Coding Battle Splits Benchmarks—Here’s Why Windows Developers Must Test GPT-5.6 Sol and Claude Fable 5
OpenAI’s GPT-5.6 Sol and Anthropic’s Claude Fable 5 are neck-and-neck in coding and intelligence benchmarks, with Sol leading coding agent tests but Fable 5 showing practical strength in creative code generation. Windows developers should test both models with their own workloads, weigh costs, and note that Fable 5’s promotional access may end soon, though no official deadline is confirmed.
Kimi K3 Weights Land July 27. Should Windows Developers Care?
Moonshot AI's Kimi K3 has taken the top spot in a front-end coding benchmark, but its July 27 open-weight release comes with major caveats for Windows developers. The 2.8-trillion-parameter model can't run locally, Anthropic has alleged unauthorized distillation, and licensing terms remain unknown. This guide breaks down what to expect, how to test cautiously, and why a leaderboard win doesn't translate into a safe workplace tool.
Anthropic melds Claude’s chat and agent modes, bringing file-aware automation to Windows desktops
Anthropic has merged Claude’s Chat and Cowork modes into a single interface on the Windows desktop app and web, removing the former separation. Cowork can now read, edit, and create files in user-selected folders on a PC, enabling practical automation tasks that continue even when the laptop is closed. While the feature is included with paid plans and rolling out in beta, IT admins should note that Cowork activity is not yet captured in audit logs, making policy controls essential.
Classic Outlook’s Copilot Integration Goes Live by Default in Late 2026 — Are You Ready?
Microsoft will automatically enable Copilot-powered email drafting in classic Outlook for Windows by late 2026 for all users with a Microsoft 365 Copilot license. The change integrates the AI assistant directly into the compose window without requiring admin action. Organizations should audit licensed users, test workflows, and train employees to review generated drafts carefully.
No More Excuses to Migrate? Classic Outlook Gets Its Own Copilot Switch
Starting July 2026, classic Outlook for Windows will get its own Copilot on/off toggle, eliminating the need for organizations to migrate to new Outlook just to provide that control. The setting does not grant Copilot access to ineligible users, and existing admin controls remain unchanged. Administrators should update support workflows and communicate clearly to avoid confusion.
Apple's Alibaba-Powered AI Cleared in China—Here's Why Windows IT Should Care
Apple's on-device AI service cleared a regulatory hurdle in China, with Alibaba's Qwen models powering the experience. Though no launch date is set, the move signals a new era of regionally fragmented AI that Windows IT pros must prepare for, including compliance gaps and feature disparities across device fleets.