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- Office Assistant - Wikipedia
It had a wide selection of characters to choose from, with the most well-known being a paperclip called Clippit[1][2] (commonly referred to by the public as Clippy) The Office Assistant and particularly Clippit have been the subject of numerous criticisms and parodies
- Clippy Desktop Assistant
Clippy lets you run a variety of large language models (LLMs) locally on your computer while sticking with a user interface of the 1990s It's a love letter and homage to the late, great Clippy - and the visual design created by Microsoft in that era
- The Life and Death of Microsoft Clippy, the Paper Clip the . . . - Artsy
Clippy (given name: Clippit) was designed by illustrator Kevan Atteberry, who contributed more than 15 of about 250 potential characters for the new Office Assistants
- Why Is Everyone Making Clippy Their Profile Picture? The Clippy Cult . . .
People across social media are banding together against what they believe are unethical practices by some of the biggest tech companies today, and they're doing it by changing their profile pictures (PFP) to Clippy
- Microsoft Clippy is FINALLY Returning - YouTube
Clippy is coming back after more than twenty years of losing his role as a Microsoft Office Assistant
- Clippy resurrected as AI assistant - Toms Hardware
Clippy lived in the bottom corner of Microsoft Office from 1996 to 2003, but now he can return to your desktop with a new life as a mouthpiece for AI, thanks to a new project from software
- Why Clippy is taking over profile pictures in an anti–big tech protest
Microsoft’s iconic Office Assistant, Clippy, is taking over profile pictures across YouTube, X, and other platforms, and it’s no nostalgia trip The trend began after YouTuber and consumer rights
- Clippy is back—this time as a mascot for Big Tech protests
A viral campaign led by YouTuber Louis Rossmann has turned Microsoft’s infamous paperclip assistant into an unlikely symbol of resistance against data harvesting, planned obsolescence, and
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