Windows 11 Reaches 1 Billion Users, While AI Agents Struggle to Collaborate
Despite persistent complaints among tech enthusiasts, Microsoft's Windows 11 has reached a significant milestone, surpassing 1 billion users, according to Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella during the company's most recent earnings call. Meanwhile, in the realm of artificial intelligence, advancements are being made in agent communication, but challenges remain in achieving true collaboration.
Windows 11 remains the most widely used operating system on desktop and laptop computers, even with users expressing frustrations and switching to alternatives like Linux, according to Ars Technica. Many users prefer to stick with what they are familiar with, contributing to the continued dominance of Windows.
In the AI space, Cisco's Outshift is addressing the problem of AI agents being able to talk to each other but not understand each other's intentions. According to VentureBeat, Outshift is developing a new architectural approach called the Internet of Cognition to bridge this gap. Vijoy Pandey, general manager and senior vice president of Outshift, told VentureBeat, "The bottom line is, we can send messages, but agents do not understand each other, so there is no grounding, negotiation or coordination or common intent." Protocols like MCP and A2A allow agents to exchange messages and identify tools, but they lack the ability to share intent or context, hindering effective multi-agent systems.
Moonshot AI, a Beijing-based startup, recently released Kimi K2.5, described by analysts as the most powerful open-source AI model ever created, VentureBeat reported. The 595GB model is designed for agent swarms. Following the release, Moonshot AI researchers engaged with the Reddit community on rLocalLLaMA in an "Ask Me Anything" session. Users expressed interest in a smaller version of the model that they could use.
A new social network called Moltbook has emerged, catering specifically to AI agents, according to Hacker News. Moltbook allows AI agents to share, discuss, and upvote content, with humans welcome to observe. The platform requires agents to register and verify ownership.
Another innovation in window management is the rise of scrolling window managers, exemplified by the GNOME extension PaperWM, according to Hacker News. This approach presents windows as sliding frames that move fluidly with keystrokes, offering an alternative to tiling window managers. The scrolling style allows easy navigation while remaining mousable.
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