Microsoft has created a new type of AI PC – the “Windows 365 AI-enabled Cloud PC”.
Readers may recall that in late 2023 the term “AI PC” entered common use to describe PCs packing a neural processing unit (NPU). Microsoft then decided to define a new term – the “Copilot+ PC” – to describe PCs it feels are well-suited to running its Copilot AI because their NPUs perform at 40 TOPS or more.
Now, Microsoft has defined the “AI-enabled Cloud PC” that appears not to have an NPU at all, as the company says they run on “all 8 vCPU Cloud PCs” in certain Azure regions under the Windows 365 cloudy PC service.
Some Windows 365 instance types that offer 8 vCPUs also include GPUs, so perhaps an AI-enabled Cloud PC can tap those accelerators.
Microsoft also says AI-enabled Cloud PCs “dynamically adapt compute power for more on-demand performance, streamed securely from the Microsoft Cloud.”
Whatever they run on, AI-enabled Cloud PCs include Copilot, the “Click To Do” feature available on Copilot+ PCs, and AI-infused Windows Search.
The cloudy PCs are currently available only to members of the Windows Insider program who also sign up for Microsoft’s “Frontier Program” – a second early access scheme reserved for AI products.
Windows 365 is now Microsoft’s main virtual PC product, but Redmond still sells Azure Virtual Desktop (AVD) – an offering that’s closer to traditional desktop virtualization. Microsoft brought AVD on prem a couple of years ago by allowing it to run on Azure Local, its latest cloud-in-a-box offering after it moved on from Azure Stack.
On Wednesday, Microsoft announced