Microsoft announced that it has rebranded BingChat to Copilot to give its AI assistant a consistent identity across its products. Similarly, Bing Chat Enterprise will be available as Copilot from December 1st.
Copilot is based on the latest GPT-4 and DALL-E 3 AI models, and Microsoft has said that the platform will not store user requests and responses in any way. Therefore, Microsoft will not use user chats to further train its models.
In addition to announcing this news at the Ignite AI event, Microsoft revealed that Microsoft 365 will offer more customization options for CoPilot. Users can choose their desired format, style and tone in Word and PowerPoint programs, and these options will also exist in other Microsoft 365 programs.
In the Microsoft Teams program, Copilot is also supposed to receive the ability to take notes during the meeting from next year. Users can even tell CoPilot specific information to be included in notes. Also in Thames channels, users can use CoPilot to compose long posts or check important events throughout the day.
Also starting next spring in Outlook, Copilot will be able to review invitation details, related emails, and related documents to create a summary of the events users want to attend. Another feature in Word will allow users to easily see the latest changes to a document by simply asking Copilot a question, such as “How can I see what has changed in this document?”
In PowerPoint, users will be able to use corporate brand assets and easily redesign them using images generated by artificial intelligence. These were just a few of the things Microsoft announced at Ignite. The company also introduced two new artificial intelligence chips named Azure Maia and Azure Cobalt CPU.
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