Windows 11 comes with the Copilot AI features, and some of the new AI PCs also include a Copilot button.
According to Microsoft, additional features that will benefit writers with better prompts and more assistance from the AI chatbot are on the way. Microsoft is developing a number of new features that will all help to enhance Copilot performance.Among these functions are catch-up, rewrite, and auto-complete. In addition, the business is developing a Copilot Lab to assist in customizing prompts for individuals’ unique job requirements. Additionally, Microsoft is allowing Copilot for Microsoft 365 users to design, share, and oversee prompts in Copilot Lab that are customized for specific teams within companies.
The ‘auto-complete’ feature is one of Microsoft AI’s most recent additions. This feature implies that Copilot will provide ideas to finish sentences when a user is creating a prompt. For example, the chatbot will display “last ten emails” along with numerous additional options if a user types in “summarise.”
After selecting one of them, the user can rapidly view the outcome. The’rewrite’ feature is another addition. This feature will add more details to a basic prompt. Users can adjust Copilot’s response with the use of this tool. This implies that when the user writes a brief description of what they want, it will edit it to include more information, clearer directions, and elaboration in order to assist the AI in understanding the context.
The ‘catch-up’ feature in Microsoft AI is another new improvement. Users will receive personalized insights and recommendations from this catch-up function based on their previous activity. For example, it will recommend that the user review the notes about their next meeting. In the upcoming months, these functionalities will be restricted to Microsoft 365 subscribers who have paid for access.
Microsoft has conducted surveys and analyses of hundreds of organizations to learn how they are using artificial intelligence. According to their findings, 78% of AI users bring their own tools to work rather than waiting for their employers to provide them.