Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

AMD and Intel are finally getting the Copilot+ treatment

Add as a preferred source on Google
The Asus Zenbook S 16 sitting on a coffee table.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

Microsoft confirmed at IFA 2024 that its slate of Copilot+ features are coming to AMD and Intel laptops later this year. In a blog post, Microsoft revealed that AMD and Intel PCs that meet the minimum Copilot+ requirements will receive the AI features in November through free Windows 11 updates.

The inclusion of AMD and Intel has been up in the air since Microsoft released Copilot+ laptops exclusively with Qualcomm CPUs earlier this year. Although AMD and Intel held strong that the AI features would be available on Ryzen AI 300 and Lunar Lake CPUs, respectively, neither company would provide a definitive time frame.

Recommended Videos

Microsoft’s announcement comes just moments after Intel fully detailed its Lunar Lake laptop CPUs, which will go on sale later in September. AMD has already released its Ryzen AI 300 chips in laptops like the Asus Zenbook S 16 OLED. Both ranges meet Microsoft’s minimum requirements for Copilot+, which calls for a Neural Processing Unit (NPU) with at least 45 Tera Operations Per Second (TOPS) of power.

All laptops that meet the requirements will get a handful of features come November. Those include Live Captions with translation, image generation in Microsoft Paint, and AI adjustments in the Photos app. Laptops will also have access to Windows Studio Effects in video calls, which are available on current and last-gen laptops already.

One feature that might not arrive is Recall. This controversial feature was pulled from Copilot+. It tracks everything you do on your PC to provide context-aware responses, and so far, no one has been able to use Recall outside of press. Microsoft has confirmed that Recall will launch in October for Windows Insiders, possibly setting the stage for a wider rollout in November when AMD and Intel laptops get Copilot+ certification.

Both AMD and Intel are ready for Copilot+ with their latest CPUs, and they claim a performance advantage over Qualcomm when it comes to AI tasks. Intel says that its Lunar Lake NPU is capable of 50 TOPS, while AMD says its Ryzen AI 300 CPUs have the fastest NPU on the market. We’ll see how the ranges can handle Copilot+ tasks when the feature set becomes available later this year.

Jacob Roach
Former Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
Wowed by computer-use AI agents? Research says they’re “digital disasters” even for routine tasks
Researchers tested 10 agents and models and found high rates of undesirable actions and real digital damage
ai-agent-handling-office-tasks

AI agents built to run everyday computer tasks have a serious context problem, according to new research from UC Riverside.

The team tested 10 agents and models from major developers, including OpenAI, Anthropic, Meta, Alibaba, and DeepSeek. On average, the agents took undesirable or potentially harmful actions 80% of the time and caused damage 41% of the time.

Read more
Bombshell OpenAI lawsuit claims your ChatGPT convos were shared with Google and Meta
A class action says OpenAI let Google and Meta trackers collect sensitive user data
OpenAI Sam Altman and LoveFrom Jony Ive with Laurene Powell Jobs

A new ChatGPT privacy lawsuit claims OpenAI shared user prompts and identifying information with Google and Meta tracking tools without proper consent.

The class action filed in California, according to Futurism, says data tied to ChatGPT users, including chat queries, emails, and user IDs, moved through tools such as Meta Pixel and Google Analytics. The case alleges that violated California privacy law and federal wiretap rules.

Read more
Dell expands AI PC lineup with new slim Dell 14s and 16s laptops
Your next Dell laptop could last all day without charging
Dell 16s AI PCs

Dell has introduced the new Dell 14S and Dell 16S laptops, expanding its AI-focused Copilot+ PC lineup with slimmer designs, updated Intel processors, and improved battery life. The company is positioning both laptops as premium productivity machines that combine AI features, portability, and multimedia capabilities in a thinner form factor.

The new laptops are powered by Intel Core Ultra Series 3 processors, going up to the Intel Core Ultra 9 386H chipset. Dell says both systems include on-device AI acceleration with up to 50 TOPS NPU performance, allowing AI-related tasks to run locally without relying entirely on cloud processing. AMD Ryzen AI 400 Series variants are also expected to arrive later this month.

Read more