Wednesday, November 27, 2024

The verdict is in: Windows Recall is great, actually

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Hands-on with Windows Recall on Windows 11 Copilot+ PCs! – YouTube


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Microsoft’s controversial Windows Recall feature is finally ready for testing, and I’ve been using it on my Surface Laptop 7 since the preview became available last week. My first impressions so far are surprisingly positive, given the many privacy and security concerns, along with delays that the feature originally had.

I’ve always been a believer in the Recall concept — that is, an app or service built into an operating system (OS) that essentially triages everything you do on your computer and makes it super easy to revisit at a later point. Recall is essentially a safety net, backing up everything you see and do in case it gets deleted or misplaced down the line.

It’s one of those features that doesn’t showcase its worth until you really need it. For example, the other day, I was writing some article content and decided that I no longer needed a few paragraphs. I deleted them and continued my day, only to realize later that I could have reused those paragraphs in another article.

The setup screen is pretty, but bare of any download progress. (Image credit: Windows Central)

Without Recall, that content would be gone, and I’d have to rewrite those paragraphs. Luckily, since I was using my Surface Laptop 7 with Recall enabled, I was able to quickly find the moment in time when I originally wrote those paragraphs and copy them directly into my live CMS.

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