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Microsoft Strikes Deal With Mistral in Push Beyond OpenAI - Slashdot

26 février 2024 à 15:48
Hahaha punaise Microsoft vient de planter un gros coup de couteau dans le dos d'OpenAI en faisant un deal avec Mistral. 😂

Je suis certain qu'on finira par avoir Mixtral dans Windows 1x.
(Et là Linux ne pourra pas vraiment lutter. Papy/Mamy pourront juste demander à Windows : "Montre-moi les photos de mes petits-enfants de l'été dernier quand ils étaient sur le bateau" et Windows le fera.)

EDIT: L'Europe met son nez dans le deal entre Microsoft et Mistral : https://www.theregister.com/2024/02/28/eu_microsoft_mistral/
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Microsoft is Working With Nvidia, AMD and Intel To Improve Upscaling Support in PC Games

Par : msmash
29 février 2024 à 18:41
Microsoft has outlined a new Windows API designed to offer a seamless way for game developers to integrate super resolution AI-upscaling features from Nvidia, AMD, and Intel. From a report: In a new blog post, program manager Joshua Tucker describes Microsoft's new DirectSR API as the "missing link" between games and super resolution technologies, and says it should provide "a smoother, more efficient experience that scales across hardware." "This API enables multi-vendor SR [super resolution] through a common set of inputs and outputs, allowing a single code path to activate a variety of solutions including Nvidia DLSS Super Resolution, AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution, and Intel XeSS," the post reads. The pitch seems to be that developers will be able to support this DirectSR API, rather than having to write code for each and every upscaling technology. The blog post comes a couple of weeks after an "Automatic Super Resolution" feature was spotted in a test version of Windows 11, which promised to "use AI to make supported games play more smoothly with enhanced details." Now, it seems the feature will plug into existing super resolution technologies like DLSS, FSR, and XeSS rather than offering a Windows-level alternative.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Microsoft Accuses the New York Times of Doom-Mongering in OpenAI Lawsuit

Par : msmash
5 mars 2024 à 16:02
Microsoft has filed a motion seeking to dismiss key parts of a lawsuit The New York Times filed against the company and Open AI, accusing them of copyright infringement. From a report: If you'll recall, The Times sued both companies for using its published articles to train their GPT large language models (LLMs) without permission and compensation. In its filing, the company has accused The Times of pushing "doomsday futurology" by claiming that AI technologies pose a threat to independent journalism. It follows OpenAI's court filing from late February that's also seeking to dismiss some important elements on the case. Like OpenAI before it, Microsoft accused The Times of crafting "unrealistic prompts" in an effort to "coax the GPT-based tools" to spit out responses matching its content. It also compared the media organization's lawsuit to Hollywood studios' efforts to " stop a groundbreaking new technology:" The VCR. Instead of destroying Hollywood, Microsoft explained, the VCR helped the entertainment industry flourish by opening up revenue streams. LLMs are a breakthrough in artificial intelligence, it continued, and Microsoft collaborated with OpenAI to "help bring their extraordinary power to the public" because it "firmly believes in LLMs' capacity to improve the way people live and work."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Microsoft tue le support d’Android dans Windows 11

6 mars 2024 à 09:17

TikTok sur Windows 11

L'incorporation d'Android dans Windows 11, afin de permettre le fonctionnement des applications et des jeux mobiles, a bien vécu. Microsoft arrête les frais à compter du 5 mars 2025.

Microsoft annonce la fin de WSA et d’Android sous Windows 11

6 mars 2024 à 11:17

Minimachines.net en partenariat avec TopAchat.com

Si vous avez une application Android dont vous êtes très dépendant, Windows 11 vous offre la possibilité de l’utiliser nativement. Le système WSA permet de piloter des applications Android directement dans son interface. Mais cette fonctionnalité va disparaitre à l’horizon 2025 avec la fin de son support par Microsoft.

L’éditeur indique que cette fonction expérimentale cessera d’être prise en charge dans Windows 11 dans un an, le 5 mars 2025. D’ici là les choses ne changeront pas pour les utilisateurs et toute installation d’une application Android sous Windows 11 faite avant le 5 mars dernier continuera de fonctionner. Mais toutes les applications cesseront de tourner après la date fatidique du 5 mars 2025.

Difficile de voir pourquoi Microsoft ne veut plus supporter ces applications, cela permettait notamment aux tablettes Surface de profiter d’un écosystème particulièrement adapté au tactile. Mon petit doigt me dit qu’il s’agit d’un constat lié au manque d’usages de cette pratique. Finalement, les utilisateurs sous Windows cherchent à utiliser des applications Windows et pas forcément des solutions Android. Ainsi, malgré un partenariat signé avec Amazon et son magasin d’applications Android, les retombées positives pour Microsoft du développement et du maintient de WSA ne seraient pas forcément positives. La majorité des usages que j’ai pu voir de cette fonctionnalité consistant à lancer des jeux sans retombées financières pour Windows… je ne suis pas certain que l’éditeur y trouve son compte.

Il restera des outils spécialisés dont le célèbre BlueStacks pour piloter des outils Android  sous Windows mais cet usage « transparent » n’aura finalement pas fait long feu. J’avoue que je serais curieux de savoir qui parmi mes lecteurs a déjà utilisé cette fonction sous Windows 11 ?

Microsoft annonce la fin de WSA et d’Android sous Windows 11 © MiniMachines.net. 2024.

Microsoft Engineer Warns Company's AI Tool Creates Violent, Sexual Images, Ignores Copyrights

Par : msmash
6 mars 2024 à 14:41
An anonymous reader shares a report: On a late night in December, Shane Jones, an AI engineer at Microsoft, felt sickened by the images popping up on his computer. Jones was noodling with Copilot Designer, the AI image generator that Microsoft debuted in March 2023, powered by OpenAI's technology. Like with OpenAI's DALL-E, users enter text prompts to create pictures. Creativity is encouraged to run wild. Since the month prior, Jones had been actively testing the product for vulnerabilities, a practice known as red-teaming. In that time, he saw the tool generate images that ran far afoul of Microsoft's oft-cited responsible AI principles. The AI service has depicted demons and monsters alongside terminology related to abortion rights, teenagers with assault rifles, sexualized images of women in violent tableaus, and underage drinking and drug use. All of those scenes, generated in the past three months, have been recreated by CNBC this week using the Copilot tool, which was originally called Bing Image Creator. "It was an eye-opening moment," Jones, who continues to test the image generator, told CNBC in an interview. "It's when I first realized, wow this is really not a safe model." Jones has worked at Microsoft for six years and is currently a principal software engineering manager at corporate headquarters in Redmond, Washington. He said he doesn't work on Copilot in a professional capacity. Rather, as a red teamer, Jones is among an army of employees and outsiders who, in their free time, choose to test the company's AI technology and see where problems may be surfacing. Jones was so alarmed by his experience that he started internally reporting his findings in December. While the company acknowledged his concerns, it was unwilling to take the product off the market. Jones said Microsoft referred him to OpenAI and, when he didn't hear back from the company, he posted an open letter on LinkedIn asking the startup's board to take down DALL-E 3 (the latest version of the AI model) for an investigation.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Microsoft Says Russian Hackers Stole Source Code After Spying On Its Executives

Par : msmash
8 mars 2024 à 16:01
Microsoft revealed earlier this year that Russian state-sponsored hackers had been spying on the email accounts of some members of its senior leadership team. Now, Microsoft is disclosing that the attack, from the same group behind the SolarWinds attack, has also led to some source code being stolen in what Microsoft describes as an ongoing attack. From a report: "In recent weeks, we have seen evidence that Midnight Blizzard [Nobelium] is using information initially exfiltrated from our corporate email systems to gain, or attempt to gain, unauthorized access," explains Microsoft in a blog post. "This has included access to some of the company's source code repositories and internal systems. To date we have found no evidence that Microsoft-hosted customer-facing systems have been compromised." It's not clear what source code was accessed, but Microsoft warns that the Nobelium group, or "Midnight Blizzard," as Microsoft refers to them, is now attempting to use "secrets of different types it has found" to try to further breach the software giant and potentially its customers. "Some of these secrets were shared between customers and Microsoft in email, and as we discover them in our exfiltrated email, we have been and are reaching out to these customers to assist them in taking mitigating measures," says Microsoft.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Microsoft Sends OneDrive URL Upload Feature To the Cloud Graveyard

Par : msmash
8 mars 2024 à 19:20
Microsoft has abruptly pulled a feature from OneDrive that allows users to upload files to the cloud storage service directly from a URL. From a report: The feature turned up as a preview in 2021 and was intended for scenarios "where the file contents aren't available, or are expensive to transfer," according to Microsoft. It was particularly useful for mobile users, for whom uploading files directly through their apps could be costly. Much better to simply point OneDrive at a given URL and let it handle the upload itself. However, the experimental feature never made it past the consumer version of OneDrive. It also didn't fit with Microsoft's "vision for OneDrive as a cloud storage service that syncs your files across devices." Indeed, the idea of hosing data into OneDrive from a remote source sits at odds with the file synchronization model being championed by Microsoft and conveniently available from macOS and Windows.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Trying Out Microsoft's Pre-Release OS/2 2.0

Par : BeauHD
14 mars 2024 à 00:45
Last month, the only known surviving copy of 32-bit OS/2 from Microsoft was purchased for $650. "Now, two of the internet's experts in getting early PC operating systems running today have managed to fire it up, and you can see the results," reports The Register. From the report: Why such interest in this nearly third-of-a-century old, unreleased OS? Because this is the way the PC industry very nearly went. This SDK came out in June 1990, just one month after Windows 3.0. If 32-bit OS/2 had launched as planned, Windows 3 would have been the last version before it was absorbed into OS/2 and disappeared. There would never have been any 32-bit versions: no Windows NT, no Windows 95; no Explorer, no Start menu or taskbars. That, in turn, might well have killed off Apple as well. No iPod, no iPhone, no fondleslabs. Twenty-first century computers would be unimaginably different. The surprise here is that we can see a glimpse of this world that never happened. The discovery of this pre-release OS shows how very nearly ready it was in 1990. IBM didn't release its solo version until April 1992, the same month as Windows 3.1 -- but now, we can see it was nearly ready two years earlier. That's why Michal Necasek of the OS/2 Museum called his look The Future That Never Was. He uncovered a couple of significant bugs, but more impressively, he found workarounds for both, and got both features working fine. OS/2 2 could run multiple DOS VMs at once, but in the preview, they wouldn't open -- due to use of an undocumented instruction which Intel did implement in the Pentium MMX and later processors. Secondly, the bundled network client wouldn't install -- but removing a single file got that working fine. That alone is a significant difference between Microsoft's OS/2 2.0 and IBM's version: Big Blue didn't include networking until Warp Connect 3 in 1995. His verdict: "The 6.78 build of OS/2 2.0 feels surprisingly stable and complete. The cover letter that came with the SDK stressed that Microsoft developers had been using the OS/2 pre-release for day-to-day work." Over at Virtually Fun, Neozeed also took an actual look at Microsoft OS/2 2.0, carefully recreating that screenshot from PC Magazine in May 1990. He even managed to get some Windows 2 programs running, although this preview release did not yet have a Windows subsystem. On his Internet Archive page, he has disk images and downloadable virtual machines so that you can run this yourself under VMware or 86Box.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Microsoft Singles Out Google's Competitive Edge in Generative AI

Par : msmash
15 mars 2024 à 15:21
Google enjoys a competitive edge in generative AI due to its trove of data and AI-optimised chips, Microsoft has told EU antitrust regulators, underscoring the rivalry between the two tech giants. From a report: The comments by Microsoft were in response to a consultation launched by the European Commission in January on the level of competition in generative AI. The growing popularity of generative AI, which can generate human-like responses to written prompts and is exemplified by Microsoft-backed OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's chatbot Gemini, has triggered concerns about misinformation and fake news. "Today, only one company - Google - is vertically integrated in a manner that provides it with strength and independence at every AI layer from chips to a thriving mobile app store. Everyone else must rely on partnerships to innovate and compete," Microsoft said in its report to the Commission. It said Google's self-supply AI semiconductors would give it a competitive advantage for the years to come, while its large sets of proprietary data from Google Search Index and YouTube enabled it to train its large language model Gemini. "YouTube provides an unparalleled set of video content; it hosts an estimated 14 billion videos. Google has access to such content; but other AI developers do not," Microsoft said.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Microsoft is Once Again Asking Chrome Users To Try Bing Through Unblockable Pop-ups

Par : msmash
15 mars 2024 à 19:35
Microsoft has been pushing Bing pop-up ads in Chrome on Windows 10 and 11. The new ad once again encourages Chrome users (in bold lettering) to use Bing instead of Google search. From a report: "Chat with GPT-4 for free on Chrome! Get hundreds of daily chat turns with Bing Al," the ad reads. If you click "Yes," the pop-up will install the "Bing Search" Chrome extension while making Microsoft's search engine the default. If you click "Yes" on the ad to switch to Bing, a Chrome pop-up will appear, asking you to confirm that you want to change the browser's default search engine. "Did you mean to change your search provider?" the pop-up asks. "The âMicrosoft Bing Search for Chrome' extension changed search to use bing.com,'" Chrome's warning states. Directly beneath that alert, seemingly in anticipation of Chrome's pop-up, another Windows notification warns, "Wait -- don't change it back! If you do, you'll turn off Microsoft Bing Search for Chrome and lose access to Bing Al with GPT-4 and DALL-E 3. Select Keep it to stay with Microsoft Bing."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Microsoft thinks Copilot will be a 'moneymaker' in long term • The Register

18 mars 2024 à 11:58
Microsoft essaie de convaincre les utilisateurs de dépenser 30 dollars par mois pour ChatGPT/CoPilote. Et dans le même temps, il essaie de convaincre les investisseurs qui s'impatientent qu'ils vont finir par gagner de l'argent. Pas sûr que Microsoft ait bien fait de dépenser 10 milliards de dollars là dedans.
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Microsoft Office 2024 Will Be Available Without Subscription

Par : msmash
18 mars 2024 à 14:00
SofiaWW writes: Microsoft has announced that the next subscription-free version of its Office suite will launch later this year. A commercial preview of Office LTSC 2024 will be available from next month, with a full launch scheduled for later in the year. The Office Long-Term Servicing Channel is supported for five years, and it holds great appeal for the many businesses that are not keen on the idea of software subscriptions. There will also be a consumer-focused version of the suite, Office 2024, available via a traditional 'one-time purchase' model. Further reading: Microsoft Really Doesn't Want You To Buy Office 2019 (From 2019).

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Nous entrerons dans la carrière – Canard PC

18 mars 2024 à 18:13
Il va y avoir des jeux sur LinkedIn. Oui le réseau "professionnel" censé vous aider à trouver du travail. Oui je sais, WTF, faut vraiment être désespéré pour en arriver là. Ou alors c'est la grande tradition Microsoft de mettre des jeux dans des trucs censés être "professionnels".
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Microsoft Hires DeepMind Co-Founder Suleyman To Run Consumer AI, Hires Most of Inflection AI Startup Staff

Par : msmash
19 mars 2024 à 16:13
Microsoft has named Mustafa Suleyman head of its consumer artificial intelligence business, hiring most of the staff from his Inflection AI startup as the software giant seeks to fend off Alphabet's Google in the fiercely contested market for AI products. From a report: Suleyman, who co-founded Google's DeepMind, will report to Chief Executive Officer Satya Nadella and oversee a range of projects, such as integrating an AI Copilot into Windows and adding conversational elements to the Bing search engine. His hiring will put Microsoft's consumer AI work under one leader for the first time. Inflection, a rival of Microsoft's key AI partner OpenAI, is exiting its Pi consumer chatbot effort and shifting to selling AI software to businesses. Karen Simonyan, Inflection's co-founder, will join Microsoft as chief scientist for the new consumer AI group. In the past year, Nadella has been revamping his company's major products around artificial intelligence technology from OpenAI. Under the Copilot brand, Microsoft has blended an AI assistant into products including Windows, consumer and enterprise Office software, Bing and security tools. With Google and others trying to catch up, Nadella's multibillion-dollar investment in OpenAI has given Microsoft a first-mover advantage. And yet, 13 months after unveiling an AI-enhanced Bing search, the company has made few gains in that market, which remains dominated by Google.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Microsoft Unveils Surface Pro 10 and Surface Laptop 6 for Business, Its First AI PCs

Par : msmash
21 mars 2024 à 16:41
Microsoft has announced two new Surface devices, the Surface Pro 10 for Business and Surface Laptop 6 for Business, both featuring Intel's latest Core Ultra processors, a dedicated Neural Processing Unit (NPU), and a new Copilot key for AI-powered features in Windows 11. The devices, which will start shipping to commercial customers on April 9th, have been designed exclusively for businesses and will not be sold directly to consumers. The Surface Pro 10 for Business, starting at $1,199, offers a choice between Core Ultra 5 135U and Core Ultra 7 165U options, with up to 64GB of RAM and a 256GB Gen4 SSD. It also features an improved 13-inch display with an antireflective coating and a 1440p front-facing camera with a 114-degree field of view. The Surface Laptop 6 for Business, also starting at $1,199, is powered by Intel's Core Ultra H-series chips and is available with up to 64GB of RAM and a 1TB Gen4 SSD. The 15-inch model includes two USB-C Thunderbolt 4 ports, while the 13.5-inch model features a single USB-C Thunderbolt 4 port. Both devices have an optional smart card reader and are Microsoft's most easily serviceable Surface devices to date. Further reading: Microsoft's official blog.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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