Microsoft Copilot, the generative Artificial Intelligence designed by Microsoft, continues to expand both at the user and commercial level. In fact, in the latter case, Copilot for businesses already has both its exclusive panel and the educational version that will provide interesting support to employees who are learning to use Artificial Intelligence in their daily lives.
Copilot is shown, in this way, as an increasingly integrated system within the work and productivity ecosystem that Microsoft offers to its clients. Whether one has a more positive or more skeptical position regarding the current rise of AI, Microsoft remains firm in its plans to position Copilot as one of the main agents in its product and service offering.
Copilot keeps expanding
As Microsoft has already officially announced, the Copilot panel and its educational version are now officially integrated within the Microsoft 365 ecosystem, which, in addition to well-known professional applications, has increasingly relied on the features that Copilot offers to customers and users.
The Microsoft Copilot Project
As the months go by, it can be seen how the Microsoft project around Copilot continues to grow without an apparent end. Since this AI was launched in early 2023, Copilot has been gradually colonizing services, as happened, for example, with the Edge browser, even immersing the branding of Bing Chat, and in other systems more focused on productivity like Microsoft Teams, where it currently has great synergies to improve the user experience.
With these movements, it is clear that Microsoft blindly trusts, not only in Copilot specifically, but also that Artificial Intelligence will continue to lead the way in technological advancements in the short and medium term, without it being a passing trend that will fade away in a few years. Certainly, this last possibility seems less and less likely, as companies have made an effort to increase the presence of Artificial Intelligence in the daily lives of users exponentially, whether it be in internal photo editing applications, chat systems, and many other uses that are being given to this technology.
Graduated in Journalism, Daniel specializes in video games and technology, currently writing for Andro4all and NaviGames, and having written for more Difoosion portals such as Alfa Beta Juega or Urban Tecno. He enjoys staying up-to-date with current affairs, as well as reading, video games, and any other form of cultural expression