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Something big is coming to Windows 11, and it sounds like voice

Microsoft’s teaser suggests a hands-off way to use your PC, with clues hiding in recent test builds.

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Microsoft Hey Copilot voice command
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What’s happened? Microsoft has set a Windows announcement for Thursday on its official channels. Separate from the tease, voice is already a live track for Windows this year, with Voice Access upgrades and a wake word for Copilot moving through public previews.

  • Official teaser from the Windows X account confirms a Thursday reveal window, without listing features.
  • Microsoft’s Windows for Business roadmap names “natural language commanding” for Voice Access, signaling richer spoken controls are on the way.
  • Recent Insider builds added a “wait time before acting” control in Voice Access, which fine tunes how quickly commands execute.
  • Copilot voice activation has been trialed with a “Hey Copilot” wake word for Insiders, laying the groundwork for hands-off use.

Your hands are about to get some PTO 👋

Time to rest those fingers…something big is coming Thursday 👀

— Windows (@Windows) October 14, 2025

This is important because: If Windows leans into voice, everyday computing gets simpler. The language and timing fit months of work in Windows 11 around Voice Access and Copilot, even if Microsoft has not confirmed specifics.

  • Systemwide voice could bring assistant-style control across desktop apps and settings.
  • It matches Copilot’s direction, where plain language triggers actions, from launching apps to quick tasks.
  • Accessibility stands to benefit, reducing long typing stretches for many users.
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Why should I care? Because this can trim clicks and speed up the stuff you do all day. Based on what Microsoft has tested in public, the most likely additions center on voice.

  • A wake word for quick, hands-off summoning to launch apps, set timers, or tweak settings.
  • Smarter Voice Access with more natural phrasing, better dictation, and desktop navigation inside common apps.
  • System-level voice shortcuts, from snapping windows to media control and screen capture.

Okay, so what’s next? To see where Microsoft could land, look at the competition. Apple already offers robust desktop voice control and a shorter Siri wake phrase, while Google is reshuffling voice on Chromebooks as Assistant gives way to Gemini.

  • On macOS, voice control spans the whole system and apps. Saying “Siri” is enough on recent versions.
  • Today, voice access on Windows handles navigation and dictation locally, and Copilot is the natural bridge for broader commands.
  • We’ll find out what Microsoft is teasing on Thursday, October 16.
Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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