Behemous

๐Ÿ’ช๐Ÿ’ช๐Ÿ’ช๐Ÿ’ช |๐Ÿ”ž|Be cool

What if a mouse was like 14ft tall


curiousquail
@curiousquail

because I disabled copilot on my windows laptop last month and when it got the KB5040427 update yesterday I didn't notice any difference. As of right now, copilot is still disabled and the update is installed.

If you wanna get rid of it, here's some user-friendly instructions. Obviously only mess with this if you know what you're doing, regedit and system group policies can be fucky.


eramdam
@eramdam

of course it's your machine, your rules but like, registry hacks are always hella unstable and will cause issues that are a PITA to troubleshoot later. at least the system/group policy system is the "documented" way to turn that kind of stuff of because Microsoft has to have it for the Enterprise users


Dex
@Dex

i mean in this case it looks like the registry hack is targeting the same thing the policy would be, at least


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in reply to @margot's post:

wish i could help besides saying that i've definitely seen a few other ppl working on the same thing, so you might at least bc able to share information with them

Earlier builds of the AI app refused to work if the toolbar wasnโ€™t placed at the bottom of the screen.

Lol

Copilot also doesnโ€™t require many PC resources, with the app just needing 4 GB of RAM

Lmao even

in reply to @curiousquail's post:

Group Policy is the saviour here. Settings configured via Group Policy are sacrosanct and Microsoft will not under any circumstance fuck with them as that would ultimately defeat the purpose of Group Policy. When configured appropriately Local Group Policy settings can make a Windows 11 install bearable and keep it that way.