Microsoft has announced a new assistant powered by artificial intelligence to help boost productivity across Microsoft 365 apps, currently being tested by select commercial customers.
Known as Copilot, the new AI feature helps create and manage documents, presentations, and spreadsheets, as well as triage and reply to emails.
Copilot is coming to all Microsoft 365 apps, from Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and Teams to Microsoft Viva and Power Platform.
It uses the GPT-4 large multimodal model just like the new Bing Chat and works like a chatbot, enabling users to generate content based on prompts exchanged via a chatbot interface.
According to OpenAI, "while less capable than humans in many real-world scenarios, exhibits human-level performance on various professional and academic benchmarks."
It harnesses the power of large language models (LLMs) with users' data in Microsoft Graph and Microsoft 365 to increase productivity.
"Copilot combines the power of large language models with your data and apps to turn your words into the most powerful productivity tool on the planet," said Jared Spataro, Microsoft's Corporate Vice President for Modern Work and Business Applications.
"By grounding in your business content and context, Copilot delivers results that are relevant and actionable. Copilot marks a new era of computing that will fundamentally transform the way we work."
It is designed to make writing, editing, and summarizing documents in Word less tedious, and it will work right alongside you, generating drafts that can be further customized and edited to include more details.
Copilot in PowerPoint can create presentations with a mouse click, allowing users to import contents from other documents and employ natural language commands to describe the ideas that must be included on each slide.
When it comes to Excel data analysis, Copilot makes data visualization lightning-fast and will also make it a lot easier to uncover meaningful insights and trends.
Copilot can also revolutionize email management in Outlook, allowing users to spend less time sorting through their inboxes and more time communicating more effectively.
"It can already create, summarize, analyze, collaborate and automate using your specific business content and context. But it doesn't stop there," Spataro added.
"Copilot knows how to command apps (e.g., 'animate this slide') and work across apps, translating a Word document into a PowerPoint presentation."
Comments
NoneRain - 1 year ago
GPT/Bing Chat are already good tools to work with. If Copilot delivers what is proposes, it's going to be great.
tverweij - 1 year ago
If one of my employees proves to me that his work can be done by an AI, then he just made himself obsolete and will be fired.
jlalinsky - 1 year ago
If one of my employees proves to me that his work can be done by an AI, then he will be immediately promoted and I'll give him more responsibility.
tverweij - 1 year ago
And then you fire all other workers that have about the same job, as you don't need them anymore, as AI can do it cheaper.
tverweij - 1 year ago
My point is that employers are always looking at cutting the costs.
First, employers imported workers form poorer countries - as they would work for less.
Then they were replaced by robots wherever possible.
After that, we just outsourced their jobs.
And that was the lower class. Now, the middle class will follow. As AI makes everything easier, their jobs can be replaced or outsourced too.
In the end, only the top 2% will profit.