AI Insights : The new AI chatbot can do things faster – INDIAai
In-depth and nuanced coverage of leading trends in AI
Latest updates in the world of AI Learning
Information repositories on AI for your reference
A collection of the most relevant and critical research in AI today
Read the latest case studies in the field of AI
Curated sets of data to aid research initiatives
The best of AI brought to you in bite-sized videos
World-class policy developments and accepted standards in AI development
Roles spanning various verticals and domains in big data and AI
Latest events in AI locally and internationally
Pieces covering the most current and interesting topics
VCs, PEs and other investors in AI today
Top educational institutions offering courses in AI
Profiles of visionary companies leading AI research & innovation
India’s brightest and most successful minds in AI research and development
A glimpse into research, development & initiatives in AI
Read all about the various AI initiatives spearheaded by GOI
Latest initiatives, missions & developments by GOI
Follow INDIAai
About INDIAai
Contact Us
Home
Share on Twitter
Share on Facebook
Share on LinkedIn
Microsoft’s Windows Copilot: The new AI chatbot could assist you in writing emails, generating papers, and locating information needed in other apps.
Microsoft is integrating an AI chatbot into Windows, and the new tool may help you do tasks more quickly.
Windows Copilot is a new AI personal assistant that will replace Cortana within your operating system. The software assists users in real time with tasks such as coding, email composition, and presentation creation.
Copilot has two points of entry into Microsoft 365. It’s built into Microsoft 365 apps like Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams, and more to help you be more productive, learn new skills and express your creativity.
With the Copilot System, Microsoft is uniquely positioned to deploy enterprise-ready AI. Copilot is more than just OpenAI’s ChatGPT, which is integrated into Microsoft 365. It’s a robust processing and orchestration engine that works behind the scenes to integrate the power of LLMs, like GPT-4, with Microsoft 365 apps and your business data in the Microsoft Graph, which is now accessible to everyone via natural language.
Business Chat, a brand-new service announced by the researchers, is another first of its kind. Business Chat integrates with the LLM, the Microsoft 365 apps, and your data to let you do things you couldn’t do before. It includes integrating your calendar, emails, conversations, documents, meetings, and contacts. With simple commands like “Tell my team how we updated the product strategy,” it can compile a report on the morning’s events from your meetings, emails, and instant messages.
The fundamental talents of Copilot are game changers for productivity: Using your specific business material and context, it can produce, summarise, analyze, collaborate, and automate. But it does not end there. Copilot understands how to command apps (for example, “animate this slide”) and collaborate across apps, such as converting a Word document into a PowerPoint presentation. And Copilot is intended to teach new skills. Copilot, for example, may learn how to link to CRM systems of record with Viva Sales to extract customer data — such as interaction and order histories — into communications. Copilot can do increasingly complicated tasks and inquiries as it learns about new domains and procedures.
The researchers will add Copilot to their productivity tools in the following months, including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams, Viva, Power Platform, and others. They will provide further information about pricing and licensing soon. Researchers unveiled Dynamics 365 Copilot earlier this month as the world’s first AI Copilot in CRM and ERP, bringing next-generation AI to every line of business.
Everyone has the right to find meaning and purpose in their job, and Microsoft 365 Copilot can assist. To meet their consumers’ unmet demands, we must move rapidly and responsibly, learning as we go. The researchers are now testing Copilot with a small sample of consumers to gather feedback and refine their models as they scale, and they want to extend to a larger group soon.
Image source: Unsplash
Publish an article and share your insights to the world.
The information provided on this page has been procured through secondary sources. In case you would like to suggest any update, please write to us at support.ai@mail.nasscom.in
indiaai.gov.in
Twitter
Facebook
LinkedIn
Join our newsletter to know about important developments in AI space