Microsoft’s Windows 12 has arrived, and it is far more than an incremental upgrade. After years of speculation, leaked builds, and bold promises at developer conferences, the release delivers a genuinely reimagined operating system built around artificial intelligence at every layer — from the taskbar to the kernel itself.
The AI Taskbar: Your New Digital Co-Pilot
The most visible change in Windows 12 is the redesigned taskbar, which now hosts a persistent AI agent panel on the right side of the screen. This is not a chatbot you open and close — it is a live, context-aware assistant that watches what you are working on and offers relevant suggestions in real time.
If you are drafting an email, it surfaces related files and calendar events. If you are editing a spreadsheet, it suggests formulas based on your data patterns. Early users have described it as having a capable intern sitting alongside them who never gets tired and never misses context.
Local LLM Integration: Intelligence Without the Cloud
Perhaps the most technically significant feature is Windows 12’s native support for locally-run large language models. Through a new system layer called the Windows AI Foundry, the OS can load and manage compressed language models directly on your device — no internet connection, no subscription, no data leaving your machine.
This matters enormously for enterprise users handling sensitive documents, healthcare professionals managing patient data, and anyone who has been uncomfortable feeding their private information to cloud-based AI services. Microsoft has partnered with Phi-4 and several open-weight model providers to offer a curated library of on-device models ranging from 3B to 13B parameters, optimised for NPU execution on AI PCs.
Neural Processing Unit (NPU) as a First-Class Citizen
Windows 12 is the first version of Windows to treat the NPU as a primary compute resource rather than an afterthought. The OS scheduler now routes eligible workloads — transcription, real-time translation, image processing, code completion — to the NPU automatically, keeping the CPU and GPU free for other tasks.
On Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite and Intel Core Ultra 300-series machines, this results in noticeably smoother multitasking when AI features are running in the background. Battery life on laptops also improves significantly because NPUs consume a fraction of the power that a GPU would use for the same inference task.
Taskbar Agents: Automation Built In
Beyond the assistant panel, Windows 12 introduces Taskbar Agents — small, purpose-built automation bots that you can install from the Microsoft Store or create yourself using natural language. These agents run persistently in the background and can perform multi-step tasks on a schedule or on trigger.
- A Meeting Prep Agent that reads your next calendar event, pulls related files from OneDrive, and prepares a one-page briefing 10 minutes before the meeting starts
- A Price Watch Agent that monitors a product URL and sends you a notification when the price drops
- A Daily Digest Agent that summarises your unread emails and Slack messages into a morning briefing
Creating a custom agent requires no coding — you describe what you want in plain language and the system builds the workflow, which you can review and approve before it runs.
Security and Privacy Improvements
Microsoft has addressed longstanding privacy concerns with a new AI Activity Dashboard that shows exactly which applications accessed AI features, which models were used, and whether any data was sent to the cloud. Users can set per-app permissions for AI access, similar to how you manage camera and microphone permissions today.
Should You Upgrade?
If you own an AI PC with an NPU — any machine purchased in 2024 or later with an Intel Core Ultra, AMD Ryzen AI, or Qualcomm Snapdragon chip — Windows 12 is a compelling upgrade that will genuinely change how you work. If you are on older hardware, the AI features will be limited or unavailable, and the upgrade offers less compelling reasons to make the jump immediately.
Windows 12 represents Microsoft’s clearest statement yet: the future of personal computing is ambient intelligence, running locally, integrated invisibly into every task. Whether that future excites or concerns you, it is undeniably here.

