Microsoft’s leaked Project Aion isn’t Windows 12 – here’s what it really is

Microsoft’s leaked Aion prototype is not a Windows replacement, but a 2024 experiment in AI-first desktop design.

Project Aion PC
Project Aion PC / Image: Microsoft & AI
  • Project Aion is a 2024 Microsoft internal prototype, not a shipping product or Windows replacement.
  • It explores an AI-first desktop interface centered on Copilot, using web apps instead of traditional Windows apps.
  • The system reportedly runs on top of Windows 11, acting more like a shell than a full operating system.
  • It relies on Windows 365 Cloud PCs for legacy apps, suggesting a cloud-augmented desktop concept.
  • The project reflects Microsoft’s experimental work on agent-driven computing, not a confirmed roadmap for Windows 11 or future releases.

A leaked internal Microsoft prototype has sparked a wave of reactions suggesting the company is preparing to replace Windows with an AI-first operating system. I don’t see evidence of that in the material that has surfaced.

Project Aion is the codename for an experimental user experience Microsoft explored internally in 2024. It blends a lightweight desktop interface with Copilot at its center and relies heavily on web apps rather than the traditional Windows desktop. While the concept itself appears real, I don’t see any indication in the leak that the company plans to ship it as a replacement for Windows 11.

That distinction matters because a lot of the online reaction seems to treat this as a product direction rather than what it actually is, an internal prototype.

Aion isn’t a replacement for Windows 11

The biggest misconception I’m seeing is the idea that Microsoft is building a new version of Windows that forces users into an AI-first desktop. I don’t think the leaked material supports that conclusion.

What I see instead is an incubation project exploring what a desktop experience might look like if it were centered around an AI assistant rather than the traditional Start menu, File Explorer, and decades of Windows interaction patterns.

The prototype reportedly (via Windows Central) runs on top of Windows 11 rather than replacing it, using a modified version of Microsoft Edge to use web technologies. That means the operating system still handles underlying system responsibilities such as hardware, drivers, and security, while Aion changes the interface layer that users interact with. However, it’s said that this version of the operating system was also modified to be lighter, providing better battery life and improved security, and it didn’t include support for traditional applications.

In that sense, I think it’s better understood as a shell rather than a new operating system.

That also helps explain why familiar elements still appear in the concept, including a Taskbar, floating windows, and a Start menu, even if Copilot replaces the traditional Windows button.

Why Microsoft would even build Copilot OS

On the surface, Aion can look unnecessary. Windows 11 already has Copilot integration. However, I think that misses the point of these kinds of projects.

Project Aion desktop
Project Aion desktop / Image: Microsoft

From what I understand of how large software companies operate, they regularly build experimental interfaces like this to explore ideas without disrupting the main product. These prototypes don’t always become products, and many never leave internal testing.

To me, the existence of Aion says more about Microsoft’s experimentation with AI-driven interfaces than it does about any confirmed product roadmap.

The biggest limitation is also the biggest clue

One detail I keep coming back to is that Aion reportedly runs web apps instead of traditional Windows software.

It suggests to me that the goal wasn’t to rebuild Windows as a full desktop replacement, but to explore what happens when the desktop experience becomes more browser-like, with AI acting as the coordination layer between tasks and apps.

When users need legacy Windows applications, the prototype reportedly relies on Windows 365 Cloud PCs.

That makes it feel less like a consumer-ready operating system and more like a controlled environment for testing ideas.

Aion Taskbar Spaces
Aion Taskbar Spaces / Image: Microsoft

The system also offered Spaces to group recent files and web pages into a “container,” which can be accessed through the Start menu or the Taskbar.

Why the cloud matters

If that approach is accurate, Windows 365 becomes the bridge to traditional desktop software.

A lightweight interface can stay simple while heavier workloads like Photoshop, Visual Studio, or legacy enterprise apps run remotely.

However, I also think it’s fair to question how practical that is for everyday use. Cloud access introduces dependencies such as internet connectivity, latency, and potentially additional costs, all of which change how people expect a desktop operating system to behave.

Some ideas could still find their way into Windows

I don’t think Project Aion means anything is coming to Windows in its current form. However, I do think it’s possible that individual ideas from it could surface later.

 

AI-driven launchers, context-aware assistance, grouped workflows, and conversational task handling are all directions Microsoft has already been exploring in different parts of Windows and Copilot.

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We’ve already seen early versions of this kind of thinking appear in features like Recall, Click to Do, and broader Copilot integrations across Windows 11.

Taskbar with Ask Copilot
Taskbar with Ask Copilot / Image: Mauro Huculak

Also, for example, to me, the Copilot menu in the Aion desktop looks a lot like the upcoming “Ask Copilot” feature in version 26H2, which replaces the Windows Search experience in the Taskbar.

Don’t confuse a prototype with a product

What’s important to keep in mind is that Project Aion dates back to 2024, and I don’t think anyone outside Microsoft can say with certainty whether it is still active today.

How do you see Microsoft’s Project Aion leak?

Voting closes: July 10, 2026 1:00 pm

Since then, the company has continued to evolve Copilot inside Windows rather than announce a separate AI-first operating system. Microsoft has also pointed to other internal efforts, including Project Solara, which suggests the broader direction is still evolving.

That’s why I don’t think it’s accurate to treat Aion as a preview of Microsoft’s next operating system.

What I see here is a snapshot of experimentation, not a roadmap.

For now, Windows 11 remains Microsoft’s desktop platform, and based on what’s been leaked, I don’t see anything that suggests Project Aion is about to change that.

About the author

Mauro Huculak is a Windows How-To Expert and founder of Pureinfotech in 2010. With over 23 years as a technology writer and IT Specialist, Mauro specializes in Windows, software, and cross-platform systems such as Linux, Android, and macOS.

Certifications: Microsoft Certified Solutions Associate (MCSA), Cisco Certified Network Professional (CCNP), VMware Certified Professional (VCP), and CompTIA A+ and Network+.

Mauro is a recognized Microsoft MVP and has also been a long-time contributor to Windows Central.

You can follow him on YouTube, Threads, BlueSky, X (Twitter), LinkedIn and About.me. Email him at [email protected].

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