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The Future Microsoft Showed at Build 2026 Barely Looks Like Windows


Friday, June 5, 2026

At Build 2026, I watched from the front row as Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella extolled the utility of AI agents for everything from business application development to scientific research in his keynote. But it was the OpenClaw announcements that drew the loudest applause. The highlight of the presentation was a demo in which Microsoft proudly showed off a sandboxed local AI agent repeatedly trying and failing to delete a bunch of user files, thanks to stricter guardrails.

Microsoft Wants AI Agents to Take the Wheel Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang appeared during the Build keynote live from Computex in Taipei to enthusiastically discuss the future of AI agents with Nadella. "The PC evolved from being an incredible tool to now being a tool that is used autonomously by an AI assistant," said Huang. "The idea: I could be traveling and on the phone, and text my PC, and ask my PC to get coding done," he said. "My PC became an assistant," Huang continued. "The idea that the PC evolved from a personal computer to a personal AI is really exciting."

In fact, Nadella and other Microsoft leaders hardly spoke about AI outside the context of agents. That extends to the hardware side, too. With Project Solara, Microsoft imagines end-user computing focusing on new agent-first devices that don’t run traditional applications at all. For Windows PCs, the company envisions AI agents taking actions on your behalf. "We want Windows to be a fantastic place to run and scale agents," said Nadella on stage. "We are very deeply engaged with the team to make OpenClaw run super well on Windows."

I see no reason for this focus on optimization unless agents are going to become a major part of all Windows experiences, not just the developer-focused ones. It's not a leap to reimagine Jensen's example in the context of everyday computing tasks. Microsoft seems to be on a mission to develop 'calm' experiences, and outsourcing your busywork to a local machine with a personalized agent fits that narrative. How long it takes a practical version of that concept to trickle down to the consumer experience is an open question.

Why Microsoft Showed an AI Agent Failing on Stage Earlier this year, the open-source OpenClaw AI agent system transfixed the tech industry, with OpenAI going so far as to hire its creator, Peter Steinberger. However, OpenClaw was an experimental piece of software that required a dangerous level of access to a computer's operating system. The demand for hardware dedicated to AI agents even led to a shortage of Mac minis.

As mentioned, Microsoft is tackling the securing concerns of such AI agents with MXCs. In these restricted environments, a developer or IT administrator decides what resources they can access. The idea is to run AI agents on your primary Windows PC, while relying on Windows to keep them under control. Microsoft’s Samantha Song and Scott Hanselman demonstrated the new OpenClaw Windows companion app on stage, which lets you configure the claw agent’s permissions in a few clicks. They showed how to set the Desktop folder to read-only, and then, in one of the keynote's most memorable moments, asked the OpenClaw agent to delete everything on the desktop. It failed to do so.

Steinberger (the so-called “clawfather”) took the stage moments after. "I'm so excited to see OpenClaw native on Windows," he said. "You know, watching a claw try to delete all your desktop files and just fail makes me really happy. Because six months ago, that totally would've worked," he said to a laughing audience.

Other companies are also on board, so MXC seems poised to quickly become the standard for securing AI agents for deployment on Windows PCs. "Continuously-running local agents, like Hermes Agent, require intentional isolation. Developers need control over what an agent can access and trust that those controls will hold,” says Dillon Rolnick, CEO of Nous Research. Microsoft says the new Hermes Agent application for Windows will integrate MXC.

The Vision Is Clear, But the Use Case Isn't Grandiose promises are nothing new from tech companies, but the advent of AI has caused such claims to inflate exponentially. Microsoft has made some concrete progress on its development of an agentic Windows: It has real hardware, such as the RTX Spark Dev Box and the Surface Laptop Pro, that can run local AI models with some guarantee of security. It hasn't solved all the problems with AI agents, but it seems committed to helping businesses and developers overcome roadblocks and create compelling experiences.

want to use Windows again. I appreciate that Microsoft continues to introduce long-awaited changes and scale back some AI features, but the value of AI agents isn't obvious and could spur even more AI pushback if it isn't careful. Unless the company can provide a clearer idea of how ordinary Windows 11 users can easily use AI agents that improve their lives, I suspect the reception will be unenthusiastic at best.

By: DocMemory
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