Over the past year, Microsoft has been actively expanding its agentic AI ecosystem across its entire product range, including Windows. Back in November, during Ignite 2025, Pavan Davuluri, President, Windows + Devices made this explicitly clear, saying:

“We’re evolving Windows to empower people to easily, securely and confidently leverage the full power of AI. Whether it’s incorporating AI tools in their workflow or choosing to use AI agents to perform tasks on their behalf, Windows is becoming the canvas for AI — embedding intelligence into the system, silicon and hardware, so organizations can move from experimentation to execution at scale.”

Now, Microsoft has announced the introduction of Agent Launchers on Windows to enhance — and simplify — agentic capabilities on the platform. Agent Launchers on Windows will serve as a standardized entry point for AI agents, simplifying registration and discovery for developers while making agents more accessible to users across the system — via the Start menu, Search, Copilot, and more.

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Why Is It Important?

The introduction of Agent Launchers means that developers don’t need to create custom code for registering agents in different places. Instead, these registered entry points, equipped with discovery tools, ensure that applications only need to register the agent once.

Microsoft says that Agent Launchers will benefit both developers and users. From a developer’s perspective, only one registration is required to make an application available across all Windows experiences supported. Deployment methods are flexible. And, apps can integrate with the broader Windows ecosystem by using App Actions — the framework that supports Agent Launchers — to provide a simple way to define an application’s capabilities and identify its benefits.

Users — who never interact with Agent Launchers directly — can benefit from easier agent discovery, as they don’t need to know where an agent is located to use it. Advanced integration allows them to access agents in multiple contexts with a familiar user experience, regardless of the agent provider.

Closing Thoughts

Ultimately, the introduction of Agent Launchers represents Microsoft’s latest push to embed agentic AI deeply into Windows. This is an incredibly bold move.

It means turning the computer into a host for AI agents that can assist across the system, without fundamentally altering core OS functionality. It may seem like a significant leap, and in many ways it is, but it also builds on the work of Microsoft and other AI leaders to transform AI from passive to active.

So far, this push toward agentic AI has been most prominent from a Microsoft perspective in workflows and the applications layer, particularly in M365 and D365. However, this development is now moving to the OS level, with agents acting as system-level assistants. This may be bold, but it is also a natural progression.

Agent Launchers for Windows is currently in preview in Windows Insider builds. However, when released to the broader public, and if there is sufficient demand, I can envision a combination of agents that not only assist you in your job but also enhance how you use the tools for that job, significantly boosting Microsoft’s position in the agentic AI space.

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