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

Copilot is coming to your Windows taskbar and File Explorer

Microsoft's AI can now summarize documents, find specific data, and handle voice commands without switching apps.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Art, Graphics, Computer
Microsoft

Microsoft is bringing Copilot to the Windows 11 taskbar and File Explorer. The update turns the plain old search box into something that actually understands how you ask questions. Type “When is my performance review due?” and the system pulls the answer from your calendar, emails, and local files. No more digging through folders.

The taskbar becomes a kind of mission control for AI. The search field now connects your local PC with your Microsoft 365 data. It knows who you work with and what documents you touch most.

The taskbar is now a command center for AI agents

Hit the @ symbol in the taskbar search and you get a menu of AI agents that run in the background. These aren’t the kind that disappear into browser tabs. They sit on your taskbar so you can see their progress while you do other stuff. A researcher agent might spend 10 minutes comparing public sentiment against internal design guides. You watch its status on the taskbar icon like a download bar. Green checkmark means it’s done. Hover for a summary. Click for the full report with sources.

Voice works too. Hold the Copilot key or hit Windows key + C. Tell it “Find the file Robin shared” and it checks your emails and meetings to figure out which Robin you mean.

File Explorer gets Copilot Control for instant document insights

File Explorer now shows your SharePoint and OneDrive files right alongside local ones. Recent docs, shared stuff, favorites, all in one view. But the Copilot Control is the real trick. You can ask questions about a file without opening it.

Recommended Videos

Need a stat buried deep in a design doc? Ask for it. Copilot pulls out something like “over 70% of employees prefer sustainable materials” and shows you the context immediately. You never leave the File Explorer window.

Over on Android, Google is doing something similar with its Files app. Gemini now automatically offers to analyze PDFs when you open them, letting you ask questions about a document without importing it into a separate AI tool.

What this means for your workflow

The updates are rolling out now. Which ones you get depends on your hardware. Standard Windows 11 machines handle the cloud stuff. Copilot+ PCs with NPUs unlock the offline tools like Fluid Dictation and Click to Do.

Bottom line? You search less and find more. The taskbar starts acting like a coworker who remembers where everything lives. File Explorer becomes a window into your documents, not just a list of folders. Keep an eye out for the Copilot icons in the coming weeks.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
Windows 11 is getting a new Screen Tint mode, and your eyes might thank Microsoft
Users can apply custom color overlays to reduce screen intensity and visual fatigue.
Windows 11 on a laptop

Microsoft is testing a new accessibility feature for Windows 11 called Screen Tint, and it could be one of those small additions that make a surprisingly big difference. Instead of changing your display's color temperature like Night Light, Screen Tint applies a customizable color overlay across the entire screen, making bright displays easier on the eyes during long work or gaming sessions.

A softer screen for tired eyes

Read more
Apple’s looking at a politically radioactive fix for the memory crisis, and the US government isn’t happy about it
Apple blamed memory costs for your price hike. Its proposed solution involves a Pentagon blacklist.
Apple Mac Mini on a Desk

A few days ago, Apple announced an ugly mid-cycle price hike, blaming the worsening-by-the-day memory crisis. According to the Financial Times, the company is now lobbying the government for approval to buy memory chips from a Chinese company. 

The company in question is CXMT, a Chinese chipmaker that the Pentagon added to its Chinese Military Company blacklist for alleged ties to the Chinese army.

Read more
As iPads get pricier, Motorola’s Pad 70 Pro arrives as a solid option… just not for US buyers yet
Great specs, a stylus in the box, and no US launch date: the Moto Pad 70 Pro sounds both impressive and disappointing.
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

If you don’t know about Apple’s recent price hike, which affected all the products in its lineup except the iPhone and Apple Watch (for now), you’ve got to be living under some sort of a rock. The revision made all the iPads much more expensive. 

Motorola, however, has just launched a 13-inch tablet that actually sounds good on paper. It’s called the Moto Pad 70 Pro, and it costs around $440 for the baseline model. The catch, however, is that the device isn’t available in the US yet. 

Read more