The technology that powers the world’s most talked-about artificial intelligence (AI) system, ChatGPT, is being integrated into Microsoft’s most widely used business software, Microsoft 365.
The technology is dubbed Copilot by Microsoft, and it will be integrated into Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook.
Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft, stated that it will “fundamentally transform the way we operate.”
Yet, the company conceded that Copilot might occasionally make errors.
Copilot’s features include:
- Summarising the key discussion points of a conversation held on meeting software, Teams, and providing recaps for someone who joins late or misses the whole event
- Creating PowerPoint presentations, including images, from prompts
- Drafting emails
- Analysing long email threads and documents
- Creating summaries and graphs of data on Excel spreadsheets
Chat GPT has captivated the world’s interest with its capacity to offer human-like solutions to even the most difficult or esoteric topics.
Unfortunately, their responses are occasionally incorrect or wholly fabricated.
While Microsoft’s technology in Office365 is not ChatGPT itself, it is built on the same language-learning methodology.
The company admitted that Copilot might be “usefully inaccurate” at times.
“We all want to focus on the 20% of our job that is truly important, yet 80% of our time is spent on busy stuff that drains us. Copilot reduces the workload “In a statement, the IT behemoth stated.
It has not yet released any specifics about the rollout.
OpenAI released GPT4, an upgraded version of the model that underpins ChatGPT, on Tuesday. Microsoft has poured billions of dollars into the company.
GPT4 has “more sophisticated reasoning skills” than ChatGPT, according to OpenAI, but it could still spread misinformation.
ChatGPT is a front-runner in the global AI chatbot competition.
Google, whose lucrative search business may be jeopardized by ChatGPT, has introduced a competitor called Bard.
Meta has its own chatbot, Blenderbot, while in China, the internet giant Baidu has introduced a more advanced version of Ernie, also known as Wenxin Yiyan, their chatbot.