Sadly sets a precedent, even if they are putting their AI features behind the paywall.
That being said, the daily reminder that Notepad ++ and LibreOffice are better anyways, and if you want to get Linux most versions have Gedit at the beginning.
Sorry, Windows 11 is total shit but let's get this straight -- it's only the stupid "AI" features that are behind a paywall. Microsoft may have a black heart of pure greed, but if you want to pop open notepad.exe and type in Harry Potter fanfic, it still works free for no extra charge. If you want the AI to help you write a romantic encounter between Snape and Dumbledore, well, you're going to have to pay then... no way around it.
I just shrank my partition but Im just gonna delete it and fully swap to linux, idc if I run into isues anymore, I always got a usb to restart and 90% of what I do is online
I found out that if you don't like the new win11 notepad with the tabs and all the other bullshit, you can just uninstall it, and the other, older, familiar notepad that was still there all the time, will take over, file type associations and all. This even worked on my work computer, where I am not an admin.
Thanks for the tip. Tabs are dumb, auto saving is annoying, and notepad is literally only for tracking my thoughts since I'm a little scatterbrained. Otherwise I'm going to use a better option like sublime or ++.
My best guess is that it's useful, if you specifically just have a snippet of text you want rephrased. Like, imagine you find a paper you want to plagiarize, so you copy some text, paste it into Notepad, click the rewrite-button, and then you can take it from there and paste it into your LaTeX editor. In some sense, Notepad is the minimal UI you need for that, which also starts up quickly.
It should be noted that you can still use Notepad without a Microsoft account, and users can go as far as removing the Rewrite icon completely from Notepad. Despite the ability to still use the software without an account, Microsoft has received some criticism for implementing what is most definitely a paywall/advertisement for a built-in piece of Windows software.
Vscode (or Codium, whatever your preferred variant is) is still free of such junk.
People act like its an unfriendly IDE, but really, it's a good text editor that auto detects formats and stuff. Works fast with huge text blocks. You can ignore anything complex.
To me, it's just weird how much hype there is about it, even though it's a fairly standard text editor. The features you mention, I expect from any editor that doesn't brand itself as 'featherweight' or whatever.
I mean, VSCode is much deeper than that. To be blunt, few other IDEs, much less text editors, can compete with the critical mass its extension repo has accumulated, with, (as a random example) support for Paradox Script for game modding.