Home
تسجيل الدخول
إنشاء حساب
محتوى التعلم
Loading...
Something Is VERY Wrong With Microsoft Windows 11 - Video học tiếng Anh
تدريب الاستماع
تدريب الاستماع
/
Video
/
The Infographics Show
/
Something Is VERY Wrong With Microsoft Windows 11
Something Is VERY Wrong With Microsoft Windows 11
اختر وضع التعلم:
عرض الترجمة
اختر الكلمة
أعد كتابة الكلمة
Highlight:
3000 Oxford Words
4000 IELTS Words
5000 Oxford Words
3000 Common Words
1000 TOEIC Words
5000 TOEFL Words
ترجمة (180)
0:00
AI is changing the world… and your computer is paying
0:02
the price. Here’s how AI is killing Windows 11.
0:05
If you own a computer that isn’t a Mac, odds are it runs Microsoft Windows - the operating system
0:10
that’s powered most PCs since the early ’90s. Microsoft used to be the undisputed king of
0:15
personal computing. But today, it’s facing more competition than ever - from Apple,
0:19
Chromebooks, and a changing PC market. So it’s constantly trying to keep Windows easy to use,
0:24
easy to update, and accessible for everyday users.
0:27
And despite all the changes,
0:29
Microsoft Office is still one of the most widely used software suites on the planet.
0:33
But they’re taking a big swing - and it might be the thing that dooms it.
0:37
Like every other major tech company, Microsoft is rushing to incorporate AI into its systems,
0:42
to automate basic tasks and guide people as they use the computer. But this isn’t Microsoft’s first
0:48
attempt at smart features. Back in the late 1990s, the company was famously mocked for Clip py - a
0:53
virtual assistant so intrusive and unhelpful it became a global punchline. Clippy didn’t
0:58
last long, but Microsoft kept trying, rolling out less-cartoony Office Assistants over the years.
1:03
Eventually, that evolved into Cortana - a chatbot-style helper bundled with Microsoft
1:08
software up until 2023. Then an earthquake hit - and everyone else hurried to catch up.
1:13
But Microsoft wasn’t about to be the one company left behind.
1:17
The launch of Chat-GPT led Microsoft to quickly develop its own. Copilot was launched in late 2023
1:22
and soon incorporated into just about everything the company operates. That included Windows 11,
1:27
the newest operating system. Old computers could be updated with the new software,
1:31
and Copilot would come with them. Whether you wanted it or not.
1:35
And that’s the real issue.
1:36
Copilot isn’t just an app. Microsoft built it like a new
1:40
layer on top of the entire operating system - and the more they force that layer in,
1:44
the more Windows 11 starts feeling like it’s fighting you instead of helping you.
1:48
Because this wasn’t just a feature update. It was a takeover.
1:52
And once AI becomes the center of the operating system, everything else starts
1:56
getting worse - performance, stability, settings, and even basic usability.
2:00
The complaints about Copilot and AI’s incorporation into Windows came even
2:04
before the software fully rolled out. That’s because Microsoft went
2:07
with the hard sell on their new feature - ending support for Windows 10 in 2025,
2:12
cutting people off from vital security and service features unless they updated
2:16
to the new model. Microsoft claims the new software is designed to make your life easier.
2:21
But if you talk to the customers, that’s not the case at all. In fact, a lot of
2:25
people started asking the same question: why does Windows feel harder to use now?
2:30
The new software was given a big push as Windows 11 debuted, with Microsoft
2:34
Copilot being accessible directly through the taskbar. Keyboards have a dedicated key
2:39
to summon Copilot. Like all the other major AI chatbots like Gemini, Grok, and Chat-GPT,
2:44
it can answer questions, write text, and generate images with a simple prompt. It is free to use,
2:49
but certain higher levels of generative tasks are accessed with an additional paid subscription.
2:54
And as Windows 10’s end-of-support gets closer, that leaves millions of users
2:58
with a brutal choice: upgrade into Windows 11’s AI-first world… or get left behind.
3:05
And the worst part? For a lot of people, it doesn’t feel like a choice at all.
3:09
Windows 11 looks like the Windows you know… just faster,
3:12
smarter, and better. But that promise comes with a trade-off.
3:15
Windows 11 had much higher system requirements than previous models, partly because Microsoft
3:20
designed it for a more always-on modern system - including AI features running in the background,
3:26
whether you use them or not. So it froze out many older devices. This felt like a
3:30
forced upgrade for many people, even if they weren’t ready to retire an older,
3:34
but reliable, computer. This was hardly anything new - most devices today don’t
3:38
simply die but get retired when the device can no longer handle updated websites and apps.
3:44
But this was different. This wasn’t just Microsoft
3:47
upgrading Windows. This was Microsoft upgrading you.
3:50
When Windows 11 debuted, it initially got positive reviews. It was a big step forward
3:55
for a system that had been seen as old hat for a while. But it soon became clear that
3:59
the majority of existing Windows 10 PCs weren’t able to run the new software,
4:04
coming from a previous generation. It’s estimated that 60% of the currently owned devices would
4:09
need to be upgraded - which could be a massive drain on the finances of their loyal customers.
4:14
And that’s when people started realizing this wasn’t a normal
4:17
upgrade cycle. It was a forced migration.
4:20
It’s been close to three years since people started playing with AI chatbots,
4:23
and the opponents are more vocal than ever. The Generative AI movement has been accused
4:28
of being based around plagiarism, damaging the environment with its heavy data use,
4:32
driving up the price of RAM, and making schoolchildren dumber. And the worst part
4:37
for the doubters is…it’s completely unavoidable. All major browsers and
4:41
websites are quickly incorporating it, but no one quite embraced it on the same level as Microsoft.
4:46
Because Microsoft didn’t just add AI to Windows… they built Windows around it.
4:51
Around the same time that Microsoft ended general support for Windows 10,
4:55
they rolled out a whole host of new updates for Windows 11 heavily reliant on Copilot. It was
5:00
an attempt to create the first fully integrated AI-powered laptop. The most significant change was
5:06
a voice mode that allows people to simply say “Hey, Copilot” and begin directing the laptop
5:10
to carry out tasks for them. One of Microsoft’s chief marketing officers compared this innovation
5:15
to introducing the mouse and keyboard. Another new AI feature was Copilot Vision,
5:20
which allowed the AI to analyze and give feedback on anything that was on screen.
5:24
And to many people, it started to seem like Big Brother was watching. But the
5:29
scariest part wasn’t what Copilot could do… it was that you couldn’t make it stop.
5:33
AI-based editing and analysis features have been around for a while, with one of the
5:38
most popular being Grammarly. This writing software takes the classic spell-check and
5:42
adds in features to help you optimize your language, eliminating awkward phrasing and
5:46
incorrect grammar. But this does it in an unobtrusive way. Many Windows
5:51
11 skeptics said that it felt like Copilot was butting in where it’s not wanted - much in the
5:56
same way Clippy would pop up when least needed in the old Office Assistant days.
6:00
But far bigger problems for Microsoft were just around the corner.
6:04
As the new software rolled out, it was criticized for its lack of support for
6:07
third-party content and a reduction in user-friendly features like customization
6:11
and default settings. Some critics said it felt unfinished. Like Microsoft rushed
6:16
the OS out the door - not to make Windows better, but to make Copilot unavoidable.
6:21
However, as time went on, frequent users started to notice small but annoying
6:25
issues with the interface. Moving files proved trickier than expected,
6:28
and settings didn’t seem to stick. Because Windows 11 isn’t just trying to be a tool
6:33
anymore - it’s trying to predict what you want, and getting in the way.
6:37
And that might sound small… but it’s exactly
6:40
the kind of thing that makes people stop trusting the OS.
6:43
And one group was harder to please than any other.
6:45
Office workers and casual users will only notice big problems. Gamers, however, will notice even
6:51
the smallest change in effectiveness. And they quickly noticed something that should
6:56
never happen - their games ran up to ten percent faster on Windows 10 than the newer model. In
7:01
competitive games where even a half-second lag can cost someone a high-stakes match, there’s
7:06
no tolerance for slowness. Soon, gamers were switching back to Windows 10 for as long as they
7:11
could. It’s something that should never happen - a new model running slower than the old model.
7:15
But the real damage wasn’t performance. It was trust.
7:18
As many environmentalists have pointed out, AI has a big cost. It eats a lot of data and energy,
7:24
and that doesn’t just affect data centers and electricity grids. When AI is heavily
7:28
built into a program, it demands more from your computer - more processing power,
7:32
more background activity, and more strain overall.
7:35
And if you’ve ever used an older PC, you already know how easy it is for performance to tank
7:40
under pressure - especially with gaming, where overheating and slowdown are already common.
7:45
So gamers were one of the first groups asking the obvious question:
7:48
do we really need all this AI? And when gamers start downgrading to the older operating system?
7:53
That’s not a minor complaint. That’s a warning sign.
7:55
Gamers are usually the first group to push new hardware, new updates,
7:59
new software. If they don’t want it… who does? And they were about to be proven right - in a big way.
8:05
Because if Windows can’t even keep power users happy… what’s it doing to everybody else?
8:10
Windows 11 adoption was slow to start, with the onerous system requirements deterring many people
8:14
from taking the plunge. It didn’t hit 50% of Microsoft’s market surge until July 2025, as many
8:20
people saw their existing software sunset, and it shot up from there. But with more users came more
8:26
problems, and towards the end of 2025 there were more reported glitches, with people’s settings not
8:32
saving and functions not working as advertised. Many systems also experienced frequent outages,
8:37
which caused major problems for gamers and workers alike. It was clear that an update was needed.
8:42
And then Microsoft pushed an update that made everything worse.
8:46
In January 2026, Microsoft issued a new series of patch notes for the software, aiming at fixing
8:51
some of its biggest headaches. Instead, it came back - and many people found the entire software
8:56
was riddled with critical errors that made it near-unusable. Some people found they couldn’t
9:01
even sign into their device, or that it wouldn’t shut down properly when they were done working.
9:05
Those on Remote Desktop experienced the worst problems, and those using old software like
9:10
Outlook Classic found themselves locked out of the app entirely. E-mails went missing,
9:15
browsers froze, and many users just slammed their laptops shut in frustration.
9:19
Microsoft had to act - fast.
9:21
Two days after the initial updates slowed the system to a crawl, Microsoft issued emergency
9:25
patches for the system. These two out-of-band updates were designed to fix the most critical
9:30
issues, which kept the systems from shutting down and kept people from signing in remotely.
9:35
But the problems didn’t stop there.
9:37
One of the most basic Windows tools - Task Manager - refused to close. It just stayed open,
9:42
chewing up resources… until the entire PC froze.
9:46
That’s not a bad update. That’s a computer you can’t rely on.
9:50
One of the biggest concerns people had about the new system was that they weren’t sure that
9:54
their data was even secure. And it all came back to the fine print. In December 2025,
9:59
people noticed that the text relating to the new AI network indicated that much like any other AI,
10:04
it could “hallucinate” - providing false information collated from the internet,
10:09
without being able to differentiate.
10:11
But buried deeper was a mention that the AI might introduce “Novel security risks”, which could
10:17
refer to spyware or viruses. While there are no reports of this actually happening, the fact that
10:22
Microsoft felt it necessary to cover themselves for this possibility has many people worried.
10:27
And when your operating system itself is admitting
10:29
“new risks”… people stop seeing it as help. They start seeing it as a threat.
10:34
After months of ongoing problems, with key features being repeatedly down,
10:38
Microsoft admitted that the software they had brute-forced
10:41
people into wasn’t working as intended. The fixes improved some of the issues,
10:46
but crashes and malfunctions persisted, and many people assumed the AI was to blame. After all,
10:51
if the software now has a mind of its own, can it actually be trusted to manage your
10:55
software? Is this the moment that AI starts to wreak havoc on our computer systems?
11:00
In a word, probably not - but that doesn’t mean we’re out of the woods.
11:04
Despite what the biggest proponents of AI say, we’re not on the verge of a benevolent
11:08
sentient AI managing our lives for us. And despite what the biggest detractors say,
11:13
we’re probably not close to Skynet launching the nukes. Even the most powerful AI software these
11:17
days, like Chat-GPT or Gemini, are still just large language models, collating information
11:22
and putting words together via predictive algorithms. They can be highly convincing,
11:27
but they’re still easy to confuse when too much information is introduced.
11:31
And that’s exactly what might have happened here.
11:33
This is the most deeply integrated AI has ever been in a mainstream computer platform.
11:38
Even Google’s Gemini in Chrome still feels mostly optional - something you use when you go looking
11:43
for it. But Microsoft Copilot is built into every corner of Windows 11, meaning it’s always there…
11:49
and it’s always running. And that constant background presence can slow things down,
11:54
add bugs, and make the whole experience more complicated than it needs to be. The result is
11:58
a messier, more frustrating system - and it’s driving people straight to the competition.
12:03
As of January 2026, users were working to figure out the feature people wanted
12:08
most from their new AI-powered operating system - the ability to turn off the AI.
12:13
But the software didn’t make it easy, and the internet was hard at work figuring out
12:16
the individual settings that needed to be deactivated. Because nobody asked for a
12:21
smarter Windows. They just wanted Windows 10 - and a computer that would let them work.
12:26
And that’s where Microsoft has a real problem. Not just with
12:29
Windows 11 - but with Windows as a brand. Consumers hold off on upgrading. Businesses
12:34
delay deployments. IT departments push back. Gamers downgrade. And suddenly the
12:39
Windows ecosystem that Microsoft built its empire on starts looking less like
12:43
a foundation… and more like a liability. Because once people stop trusting Windows,
12:48
Microsoft doesn’t just lose an OS - it loses the center of its entire ecosystem.
12:53
This isn’t the only area where Microsoft is falling behind the competition - check out
12:57
“The REAL Reason XBOX is Failing” for the behind-the-scenes story
13:00
of the company’s fall from gaming grace, or watch this video instead.