We don't need another Microsoft app. We need Microsoft to clean up their current apps, conduct thorough usability testing and other UX research, remove duplicate functionality, and create a smoother user experience.
Although Copilot has become worse in terms of response quality (at least here in Mexico), it is true that it has a lot of future. Let's hope Copilot continues to evolve 🙏
Still no Team Copilot in Teams? Today, we have a mess of three different places of Meeting Agenda and meeting recap info. In the Classic Outlook Text Field (not visible in the Teams Meeting), In the AI recap tab (generated after the meeting), and in the Loop Meeting Notes (not visible in Classic Outlook, but visible in Teams during the meeting). 1. Team Copilot in Teams was supposedly helping updating the Loop Notes real-time during the meeting, keeping everyone literally on the same page, with summarizing and updating follow-up tasks 2. Classic Outlook needs to also show the Loop Meeting Notes in the invite, so everybody can use the NEW way to organize a meeting, since ONLY Loop Meeting Notes are visible DURING the teams meeting
That's cos they are co-evolving and co-creating with the customer. Unless such products are tried and tested in real world, they won't get any better. But one can't deny the immense potential of these tools
For the first time Microsoft guys are showing new features that are already released to their customers, before we need to wait for months to get those new features where the story of public preview to general availability starts:). not all the features are available by now to us, but one-thousand-mile road starts with the first step so keep it up Microsoft.
I think M365 and Copilot is so underrated. This launch should get more attention than the iPhone launch. Because, ultimately, it is going to be one of these launches that decides when you are replaced. I even think Microsoft is making this low key on purpose, so that all the bosses know what's going on but you don't.
Bosses know what's going on? Nah, bosses won't replace anybody, because somebody has to do the front end work. They don't understand the average job enough to tell copilot what to do.
I really enjoyed this video! The insights on Wave 2 of Copilot are impressive and show a lot of potential. Looking forward to seeing how this evolves. Great job!
This is so beautiful. As a data analyst, I've noticed that some of the tasks I'm paid to do have become easier for clients to perform themselves. This might make it seem like my skills are no longer needed, but I can see the new opportunities this change has created. This has truly made the future of workflow brighter, and I can't thank Microsoft enough.
Hahaha homie, every 6 months AI will eat more and more of what you do. If you are someone with ideas you could make them real easily, but most people are going to be losing their jobs.
*Generated using Microsoft Copilot* 0:12 - 0:14: Satya Nadella greets the audience, expressing his excitement to be with them today. 0:15 - 0:22: Reflecting on the journey, Satya mentions it’s been 18 months since the announcement of Microsoft 365 Copilot and highlights the rapid learning and progress made. 0:22 - 0:34: Copilot’s impact: Satya explains how Copilot is transforming work for over 400 million Microsoft 365 users by organizing workflows and work artifacts. 0:39 - 0:46: Adoption growth: He shares data showing that daily usage of Copilot has nearly doubled quarter over quarter, with increasing customer deployments. 0:48 - 0:55: Rapid adoption: Satya notes that Copilot’s adoption rates are faster than any other new Microsoft 365 suite. 0:55 - 1:06: UI for AI: Satya describes Copilot as the user interface for AI, breaking down silos between work artifacts, communications, and business processes. 1:08 - 1:27: Scaling AI: He discusses how AI models become more valuable when fine-tuned with business data and workflows, emphasizing the importance of human-AI interaction. 1:31 - 1:38: Wave 2 announcement: Satya announces Wave 2 of Microsoft 365 Copilot, highlighting three major evolutions. 1:40 - 1:47: New AI system: The first evolution involves integrating the Web, Work, and Pages into a new AI system for knowledge work. 1:48 - 2:01: Pages introduction: Satya introduces Pages, an AI-powered canvas that transforms information from the Web and work into a collaborative space. 2:03 - 2:14: Historical context: He compares Pages to past platform shifts like the PC and the Web, which fundamentally changed work artifacts. 2:16 - 2:20: AI age artifact: Satya describes Pages as the first new artifact for the AI age. 2:21 - 2:32: Deep integration: The second evolution focuses on integrating Copilot deeply into everyday work canvases like Outlook, Excel, and PowerPoint. 2:35 - 2:45: Flow maintenance: Satya explains how Copilot keeps users in their flow with features like Narrative builder in PowerPoint, Python in Excel, and Prioritize my inbox in Outlook. 2:47 - 3:00: Copilot agents: The third evolution introduces Copilot agents, transforming bespoke interactions with siloed business applications into seamless Copilot agents. 3:00 - 3:07: Closing remarks: Satya expresses excitement about the new capabilities and hands over to Jared Spataro. 3:08 - 3:13: Jared Spataro’s introduction: Jared thanks Satya and expresses his excitement to discuss Copilot Wave 2. 3:15 - 3:26: Customer engagement: Jared highlights the deep engagement with nearly 1,000 customers, whose feedback has driven over 700 product updates and 150 new features. 3:29 - 3:45: Performance improvements: He mentions significant performance improvements, including moving to GPT4o, resulting in faster responses and higher satisfaction. 3:47 - 3:56: Feedback loop: Jared describes Copilot as the world’s best feedback loop for AI at work, with continuous improvements based on user input. 3:58 - 4:03: New capabilities: He announces the addition of new capabilities and models, including OpenAI o1 with advanced reasoning. 4:04 - 4:09: Wave 2 overview: Jared reiterates the three ways Copilot is evolving in Wave 2 and prepares to dive into the details. 4:11 - 4:18: BizChat & Copilot Pages: Jared introduces Copilot as the new UI for AI, combining the Web, Work, and Pages. 4:18 - 4:26: Pages as a digital artifact: He describes Pages as a dynamic, persistent canvas designed for multiplayer AI collaboration. 4:26 - 4:33: Demo introduction: Jared sets up a demo scenario involving an EV charging company exploring a business opportunity with LAX airport. 4:33 - 4:49: Web research: He demonstrates asking Copilot to gather basic information from the web, such as daily passenger numbers and EV charger parking spaces at LAX. 4:49 - 5:00: Creating a Page: Jared shows how to turn the gathered information into a Page, where you can work alone, with colleagues, or with Copilot. 5:00 - 5:18: Collaborative sharing: He explains how to share the Page with colleagues for further research, tagging them to start immediate collaboration. 5:20 - 5:34: Building the business case: While colleagues add industry news, Jared continues researching to build out the business case, with Copilot providing citations for verification. 5:36 - 5:43: Web to canvas: Jared summarizes how Copilot brings web information onto a collaborative canvas, enabling teamwork. 5:45 - 5:55: Pages availability: He announces that the Pages experience is now available to over 400 million users with a free web-grounded Microsoft Copilot account. 5:57 - 6:03: Efficiency gains: Jared highlights the efficiency of using Copilot for web research, saving multiple searches and effort. 6:04 - 6:19: Introduction to BizChat: He introduces BizChat, which integrates web, work, and business data into a cohesive workflow within Microsoft 365. 6:21 - 6:26: Organizational insights: BizChat turns organizational content into a rich database of information and insights. 6:28 - 6:40: Demo continuation: Jared pivots from web to work, asking Copilot to reference a previous plan to kickstart a new proposal. 6:43 - 6:47: Plan creation: Copilot pulls in deliverables, schedules, and owners, formatting them into a table on the Page. 6:50 - 6:58: Collaborative planning: Colleagues update the workback schedule and assign owners, demonstrating real-time collaboration. 7:00 - 7:11: Proposal outline: Jared moves on to the proposal outline, referencing a coworker’s meeting recording to extract customer requirements. 7:13 - 7:26: Meeting synthesis: Copilot synthesizes the meeting discussion, providing key takeaways in seconds. 7:29 - 7:37: Building the proposal: With the requirements in hand, Jared starts building the proposal, reusing a successful past proposal as a template. 7:40 - 7:48: Finalizing the proposal: Copilot updates the old proposal with new customer requirements, pulling everything together with a final click. 7:48 - 8:02: New work pattern: Jared emphasizes that Pages represents a new pattern of work, designed for human to AI to human collaboration on a dynamic, persistent canvas. 8:02 - 8:09: BizChat integration: He explains that Pages is the first step in a new design system for knowledge work, which integrates seamlessly with BizChat. 8:09 - 8:17: Reusable business assets: With BizChat, all data becomes a reusable business asset, allowing iterative collaboration with Copilot. 8:19 - 8:27: Daily habit: Jared notes that Copilot is becoming a daily habit in Microsoft 365 apps, enhancing personal productivity and saving time. 8:29 - 8:36: Transforming meetings: Customers report that Copilot in Teams has transformed meetings, and similar impacts are expected for Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook. 8:38 - 8:47: Excel’s importance: Jared highlights Excel as the front-end for business data, crucial for deriving value from ERP and CRM systems. 8:47 - 9:01: General availability: He announces that Copilot in Excel is now generally available, ready to enhance data analysis and productivity. 9:03 - 9:11: Revenue trends demo: The demo begins with importing data on product sales, pricing, and customer feedback from various sources into Excel. 9:11 - 9:26: Data shaping: With all raw data in one place, Copilot helps shape and analyze the numbers, starting with calculating monthly revenue by product. 9:27 - 9:36: Handling large data sets: Jared explains that while calculating revenue is routine, the large data set makes it unwieldy, so Copilot is asked to handle it. 9:36 - 9:50: Executing calculations: Copilot creates a plan, executes it, and shows its work, allowing for questions and iterations on the solution. 9:50 - 10:05: Adding results: Satisfied with the results, Jared adds the calculated revenue column to the spreadsheet. 10:07 - 10:18: New request: A new request involves understanding product category performance and ensuring each category sells at least $100,000 per month. 10:18 - 10:29: Creating a bar chart: Copilot creates a simple bar chart to visualize which product categories are selling best. 10:29 - 10:35: Conditional formatting: The chart uses conditional formatting to highlight product lines not meeting the $100K threshold. 10:37 - 10:46: Customer feedback analysis: Jared digs deeper into customer feedback to understand why some products aren’t selling well. 10:46 - 10:56: Top concerns: Copilot analyzes customer feedback and surfaces the top three concerns, identifying charging speed as a potential issue. 10:58 - 11:03: Highlighting reviews: Copilot highlights customer reviews mentioning charging speed for further analysis. 11:05 - 11:14: Comprehensive analysis: With Copilot’s help, Jared quickly analyzes a complex data set, providing a full picture of revenue trends for the business review. 11:14 - 11:20: Excel for financial analysts: Jared emphasizes the importance of Excel for financial analysts, who rely on it to mine data for business insights. 11:20 - 11:33: Python’s role: He highlights Python’s growing importance for advanced analysis, modeling, and data visualization, and announces Copilot in Excel with Python. 11:33 - 11:45: Democratizing Python: Copilot in Excel with Python democratizes powerful capabilities, allowing users to leverage Python without needing to code. 11:48 - 11:56: Revenue forecast: Jared sets up a scenario where Copilot assists in creating an annual revenue forecast, a typically time-intensive task. 11:58 - 12:08: Advanced analysis: Copilot writes and interprets Python code to perform advanced analysis on three years of historical sales data.
12:08 - 12:22: Experimentation workspace: Copilot opens a new workspace for experimentation, providing insights without altering the original data. 12:25 - 12:35: Executing analysis: Copilot previews its reasoning, creates a plan, and executes it by running Python code, giving a quick picture of the numbers. 12:38 - 12:46: Iterating on work: Jared asks Copilot to forecast annual revenue for the next two years, with Copilot creating a plan and running Python code. 12:49 - 13:02: Editing Python code: Users can directly edit the Python code in the workbook, showcasing the integration of Python into Excel. 13:05 - 13:15: Prioritizing customers: Jared asks Copilot to rank customers based on upsell opportunity to meet revenue goals, using Python for the analysis. 13:18 - 13:32: Analysis workspace: Copilot prioritizes metrics and provides a preview of the data it will use, jumping back to the analysis workspace. 13:32 - 13:40: Prioritized table: Within moments, Copilot produces a prioritized table of customers based on upsell opportunities. 13:44 - 13:54: Visualization and methodology: Copilot creates a chart and explains the weighting methodology used for customer ranking. 13:57 - 14:02: Detailed summary: Jared highlights how Copilot helps create a detailed data summary without writing any code. 14:06 - 14:07: Collaboration: Jared concludes by noting that the report is ready to be sent to the sales team for collaboration. 14:07 - 14:16: PowerPoint for storytelling: Jared transitions to PowerPoint, introducing Narrative builder as a tool for creating and telling stories. 14:17 - 14:22: Creative partner: Copilot acts as a creative partner, helping to develop the structure and flow of presentations while keeping users in control. 14:22 - 14:35: Brand Manager: With Brand Manager, users can easily create on-brand presentations, bringing their stories to life. 14:39 - 14:49: Pitch deck creation: Jared demonstrates asking Copilot to create a pitch deck in a company template to attract and retain shoppers. 14:49 - 15:05: Draft outline: Copilot starts with a draft outline, allowing users to reorder, delete, or add topics to ensure a solid structure before creating the presentation. 15:08 - 15:14: Adding sections: Jared adds sections on key value propositions and customer testimonials to the outline. 15:18 - 15:26: Slide creation: Copilot plans and creates slides, crafting titles, draft copy, and pulling in images from the corporate library. 15:26 - 15:34: On-brand presentation: The presentation is formatted using the company’s PowerPoint template to ensure it is on-brand. 15:38 - 15:50: Iterating with Copilot: Jared iterates with Copilot, requesting images and receiving several options from the company’s approved image library. 15:52 - 15:57: AI-generated images: Copilot can also provide AI-generated images using Designer and DALL-E 3. 15:59 - 16:03: Slide design options: PowerPoint offers several slide design options aligned with company brand guidelines. 16:05 - 16:17: Final presentation: Copilot adds speaker notes, slide transitions, and animations, resulting in a professional, on-brand presentation. 16:19 - 16:24: Focus on pitching: With Copilot handling design, writing, and editing, users can focus on delivering their pitch. 16:27 - 16:35: Teams meeting pattern: Jared discusses how Microsoft Teams has normalized a new pattern for meetings, with productive conversations happening in the chat. 16:37 - 16:44: Meeting insights: Copilot in Teams can now reason over both the meeting transcript and chat to provide a complete picture of the discussion. 16:45 - 16:48: RFP discussion: Jared sets up a scenario where a team discusses a customer’s RFP in a meeting. 16:50 - 16:55: Missed questions: As the meeting wraps, Copilot captures the conversation, ensuring no important questions are missed. 16:56 - 17:02: Question follow-up: Copilot scans the transcript and chat for unanswered questions, providing a list for follow-up. 17:04 - 17:13: Closing the loop: With a list of open questions, users can follow up and close the loop with the team. 17:15 - 17:19: Complete capture: Copilot ensures every part of the meeting is captured, so no idea or contribution is left behind. 17:23 - 17:29: OneDrive integration: Jared introduces Copilot in OneDrive, highlighting its ability to help users find exactly what they need quickly and easily. 17:31 - 17:37: Content summarization: Copilot summarizes content and answers questions without needing to open files, enhancing efficiency. 17:39 - 17:50: Comparing files: Jared demonstrates asking Copilot to compare two files with similar names to identify the latest product specs for a customer. 17:52 - 18:03: Clear summaries: Within seconds, Copilot provides a clear summary highlighting the differences, ensuring users can confidently select the correct file. 18:06 - 18:14: Word for writing: Jared transitions to Word, where Copilot acts as a powerful writing and editing partner, accessing emails, meetings, and colleague content. 18:15 - 18:28: Iterative co-creation: Users can iterate and co-create with Copilot, repurposing valuable content and building on existing work. 18:31 - 18:37: RFP response: Jared sets up a scenario where Copilot helps create an RFP response by referencing the latest product specs and approved formats. 18:39 - 18:43: Meeting details: Copilot pulls in details from a meeting about the customer’s needs to enhance the RFP response. 18:45 - 18:49: Grounded responses: Copilot’s ability to ground responses in the right content ensures high-quality results. 18:52 - 19:02: Draft creation: Copilot creates a plan, executes it, attaches a security label, and produces a first draft of the document within seconds. 19:04 - 19:06: Time-saving: This process, which could take hours manually, is completed quickly with Copilot. 19:08 - 19:16: Iterating on the draft: Jared iterates on Copilot’s work, asking it to reference an email for updated pricing and pull in a discount. 19:18 - 19:29: Strengthening the proposal: Jared adds more information on product benefits and certifications, organizing it into a table. 19:33 - 19:42: Polished response: Working with Copilot, users can create a polished RFP response with the most relevant and up-to-date information. 19:44 - 19:45: Winning business: The final step is to win the business with the completed proposal. 19:47 - 19:56: Inbox management: Jared discusses the challenges of managing an inbox and introduces “Prioritize my inbox” to transform email management. 20:00 - 20:09: New inbox: The new inbox ensures emails serve the user and their goals, rather than the other way around. 20:11 - 20:18: Prioritizing emails: Copilot in Outlook helps prioritize emails by analyzing content and job context, highlighting the most important messages. 20:20 - 20:32: Sorting by priority: Users can sort emails by priority based on Copilot’s analysis, making it easier to manage important communications. 20:35 - 20:43: Significant emails: Jared demonstrates how Copilot identifies significant emails, such as one from a new customer, and highlights necessary actions. 20:45 - 20:51: Teaching Copilot: Users can teach Copilot to prioritize emails from key customers, ensuring they are always top priority. 20:53 - 21:00: Inbox partnership: Copilot acts as a partner in managing the inbox, helping users stay on top of important emails and tasks. 21:02 - 21:13: Outlook mobile: Jared switches to Outlook mobile, demonstrating how Copilot helps draft responses on the go, making it easier to be productive on your phone. 21:15 - 21:23: Suggested responses: Copilot analyzes the email and offers suggested responses, which users can select and customize. 21:26 - 21:33: Tone adjustment: Jared shows how to ask Copilot to adjust the tone of the email to make it more formal for a customer. 21:36 - 21:43: Editing assistance: Users can edit the email themselves or ask Copilot for help, highlighting sections and specifying what to include. 21:47 - 21:54: Finalizing the email: Once satisfied with the edits, users can accept the changes, and the email is ready to send. 21:57 - 22:04: Introduction to Copilot agents: Jared introduces Copilot agents, which automate and execute business processes, breaking free from siloed applications. 22:06 - 22:13: Business process transformation: Copilot agents enable organizations to transform business processes by integrating them into the flow of work. 22:15 - 22:24: Agent capabilities: Agents can reason, remember, be trained, and know when to ask for help, ranging from simple to fully autonomous. 22:26 - 22:31: Agent types: Jared explains the different types of agents, from simple prompt-response to advanced agents that automate tasks. 22:33 - 22:40: Autonomous agents: Sophisticated agents can orchestrate other agents, providing a higher level of automation and efficiency. 22:43 - 22:48: Integration into workflow: Copilot agents bring the power of automation directly into the workflow, working in the background. 22:50 - 22:55: Ease of creation: Agents are fully managed and orchestrated by Copilot, making them incredibly easy to create and deploy. 22:58 - 23:03: Scaling teams: Copilot agents build capacity, enabling teams to scale their operations like never before. 23:05 - 23:11: Field service agent: Jared demonstrates a field service agent that provides step-by-step instructions for troubleshooting error codes. 23:12 - 23:21: Real-time assistance: The field service agent accesses product knowledge to give real-time instructions, enhancing on-site support.
23:23 - 23:27: Creating an agent: Jared shows how simple it is to create an agent using Agent Builder, describing the desired functionality. 23:29 - 23:37: Connecting to knowledge sources: The agent is connected to SharePoint to access the necessary knowledge for troubleshooting. 23:40 - 23:46: Immediate use: The agent is built in seconds and can be used immediately or further configured to fit specific needs. 23:47 - 23:58: Expanding knowledge base: Users can expand the agent’s knowledge base by connecting to additional resources like SharePoint sites or other data sources. 24:02 - 24:04: Customization: The agent’s name or image can be updated to align with the company’s branding, ensuring consistency. 24:04 - 24:11: Testing and creating agents: Users can test the agent or simply hit create to finalize it, ensuring it respects Microsoft 365 and SharePoint security permissions. 24:14 - 24:24: Sharing in BizChat: The Copilot agent is now ready in BizChat and can be shared with the team for collaborative use. 24:27 - 24:31: SharePoint’s evolution: Jared highlights SharePoint’s role as a leading solution for enterprise knowledge and business processes. 24:34 - 24:42: Turning SharePoint sites into agents: Every SharePoint site can now be turned into an agent, leveraging its vast knowledge repository beyond natural language search. 24:45 - 24:55: Creating an agent from SharePoint: Jared demonstrates creating an agent from a SharePoint site, library, or folder to handle customer records and maintenance reports. 24:57 - 25:09: Agent capabilities: The agent can answer questions, reason over material, and take action, functioning like a well-informed teammate. 25:11 - 25:24: Immediate use: Within seconds, the Copilot agent is ready to be used or shared with others, enhancing team collaboration. 25:26 - 25:31: Adding to Teams chat: Jared adds the agent to a Teams chat, making SharePoint artifacts accessible and useful for the team. 25:33 - 25:39: Real-time responses: The agent can be mentioned in chat like a teammate, responding in real time to new information and questions. 25:41 - 25:46: Further customization: Jared takes it a step further by editing the agent to take specific actions on behalf of the team. 25:49 - 26:01: Customizing in Copilot Studio: In Copilot Studio, users can customize the agent’s knowledge and actions, such as placing orders for new parts. 26:05 - 26:12: Connecting to Dynamics 365: The agent is connected to Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management to handle procurement tasks. 26:15 - 26:21: Updating and deploying: The agent is updated and brought back to the Teams chat to assist in solving customer issues. 26:24 - 26:32: Ordering parts: Jared demonstrates asking the agent to order a recommended part, with the agent confirming before proceeding. 26:32 - 26:34: Task completion: Once confirmed, the agent completes the task, showcasing its efficiency and utility. 26:36 - 26:42: Conclusion: Jared wraps up by emphasizing how Copilot serves as the new UI for AI, breaking down silos between work artifacts, communications, and business processes. 26:44 - 26:50: Pages and BizChat: He highlights how web data and work data come together in Pages, the first digital artifact for the AI era, and how BizChat turns all data into reusable business assets. 26:52 - 27:03: Rapid improvements: Jared mentions the rapid improvements in Copilot within Microsoft 365 apps, including Python in Excel, Narrative builder in PowerPoint, and Prioritize my inbox in Outlook. 27:05 - 27:12: Copilot agents: He notes that Copilot agents enhance every business process, helping to increase revenue and reduce costs. 27:15 - 27:28: Wave 2 preview: Jared concludes by stating that this is just the beginning of Wave 2, with more exciting developments to be revealed in the next two months.
I REALLY want Copilot to succeed, but the promises made about it do not always materialise in reality. However, I am rooting for it, especially to be far more intuitive, far more native in all its own apps and have relevant real-work use cases
They're saying "Generally available" but I can't find them in Excel or PowerPoint even after updating to the latest version. How's it generally available if we can't see it yet?
Getting excited about the cool new charts they showed when demonstrating Python in Excel? Well sorry, but those aren't Excel charts, they're Python charts. You can't click on the chart and adjust the formatting - it's only editable via Python code. They basically just slapped a viewer for ChatGPT data analytics into Excel. If they wanted to do things properly, they'd have fully integrated the Python charts into Excel so they could be edited just like any other chart.
Not just one. You need to buy a lot of different copilots. For example, if you already subscribe to office 365 + copilot and you want the teams stuff, you need to also upgrade to teams premium and another copilot for teams. That does not include copilot for planner though. For that, you need to get planner plan 3 + copilot for another 30 bucks per user. You're well over 100 bucks a month per user for everything they have shown.
I feel lucky by having AI in my device which can help solve programming language it's easy to discover the world as well but subscription troubles a lot.
Si el ordenador te indica ser formateado y le quitas la batería del reloj y la vuelves a colocar el sistema se reinicia correctamente .King iluminatti android.
The update would be nice, if it worked properly. But the android app of copilot now only works for 50%. I can't use it anymore in other languages then English, I can't start a new conversation. The voice only works sometimes, and when it does, it uses the call volume instead of the speaker volume.
@@chuckkoehler9526 As soon as they have the hardware to support the world's office employees using it. Nvidia is having hard time keeping up with the big chip orders, and it's holding AI companies back.
@@chuckkoehler9526 GPT-o1 is great, but i think we need specific models for specific tasks. GPT-4o-mini for easy to answer standard questions to achieve fast response times, gpt-4o for mor complex tasks or questions and gpt-o1 for complex questions and tasks that need a lot of reasoning.
Internet should be turned off every one hour for one hour in offices, so people can work without distraction. There should be a device access removed automatically for one hour so people can talk face to face while sitting in office.
Macrosofit você é muito especial e fábrica Xbox séries s Xbox 360 e Xbox one Xbox séries x obrigado pelo Xbox séries s obrigado macrosofit por você obrigado
Please.. why you block resize taskbar on win 11? We need again you dont need to change it from windows xp , 7 and 10.. its a main tool from all the time! Add differe t tools but not delete all important tools. Stop doing strange things.
Office programs are complex enough, this update needs a new learning curve and only professionals will understand it quickly. I don't know if you will take my comment into consideration but if you really want to serve your customers you should put two versions, a "normal version" (which we are used to) and an "expert version" and lessons and tutorials should be distributed everywhere around it.
Just like when we were waiting for hololens 3, the SOC in 2 was too low powered. Literally as technology for that product was starting to mature and processing was all that was needed you gave up. Instead of doing the quality work that your company speaks often about. You do the exact thing you're known for. Building subpar technology and pulling out right when the next revision was going to be usable. Why would we trust you to stick with a technology like co-pilot into maturity. Please continue to mess up until D.o.D, and the commercial sectors are pushed to a more reliable and stable company. We will remember Microsoft as the most annoying and can't get right company in history.
YOU'VE LOCKED ME OUT OF MY ENTIRE ACCOUNT AND MY PC AND I'M IN THE MIDDLE OF PLANNING MY MOTHER'S FUNERAL!! I HAVE NO ACCESS TO ANYTHING!!! WHAT THE ACTUAL ****????
Cool if Windows Microsoft will have anti glitch system which will control things all the time. Sometimes turn laptop and happens glitch, things not go well as usual. Why? U didn't touch anything at all, but glitch happened and things go in wrong direction from this moment when you pushed button start. it take time minutes hours you trying to fix, everything is going to ruined morning or day.... Monitoring and controlling glitches and creation perfect smooth windows OS can really make much days better , just because everything is ok.
@@royscott5884 Voice is a game-changer for older folks who can't type as fast anymore. It makes it so much easier for them to get their point across just by talking
Translators are losing their jobs, Developers and Analysts the next. If you had a team of 10 members, companies will start reducing significantly in order to save costs.
I work in 365 adoption and this is all leading to AI automation. General office workers can't be trained quickly enough to use Copilot. I love it but they're gonna have to automate it in the apps.
MY Old PC is slow ASF with all these new Windows updates sometimes I wish I can run all your guys Apps as Run this programs in compatibility mode for: 256 Colours and Run in 640x 480 Resolution. Everytime I open a Program it's like I'm walking behind my GrandPa in a 1 way passage....I can't even Ctrl + Alt + Del even to the left. Gone are the Days of Having a 4GB PC as fair Rugud device.
Imagine AI researching content on the web generated by AI which will eventually be published on the web then other AI agents do research consuming stuff generated by AI to be eventually published to the web for other AI to use..... Read more.... AI is probablistic by design and people are betting their jobs, clients, lives and the world on fancy marketed UIs that basically depend on multiple layers of probability. The fact that AI researchers are reluctant to use AI generated content for further training should be enough to stop you from using AI. Anyways, keep making these companies rich 😉. In the unavoidable event that something goes wrong, none of these companies will be all teeth, fancy UI and transitions.
We don't need another Microsoft app. We need Microsoft to clean up their current apps, conduct thorough usability testing and other UX research, remove duplicate functionality, and create a smoother user experience.
the end state seems to be you won't be interacting with the UI, instead just interacting with CoPilot
They are literally useless. Let alone Copilot.
The biggest disappointment if the machine learning era in my opinion.
We honestly just want a faster Microsoft 365 ..it always so laggy and ui looks 10 years old …Ai doesn’t help with that
ANd PLEASE please bring back " Clippy" as an A.i Office Assitant: He did all this and better on Windows 98
@@FormByFirelight Most definitely generative AI, but agree that Copilot has been highly disappointing.
Although Copilot has become worse in terms of response quality (at least here in Mexico), it is true that it has a lot of future. Let's hope Copilot continues to evolve 🙏
yeeees.... it had better answers when the creative mode button was available! (also from mexico)
Are you guys using it in English or Spanish
It's worse too in Indonesia. They are so confident with their delulu answers.
Still no Team Copilot in Teams? Today, we have a mess of three different places of Meeting Agenda and meeting recap info. In the Classic Outlook Text Field (not visible in the Teams Meeting), In the AI recap tab (generated after the meeting), and in the Loop Meeting Notes (not visible in Classic Outlook, but visible in Teams during the meeting).
1. Team Copilot in Teams was supposedly helping updating the Loop Notes real-time during the meeting, keeping everyone literally on the same page, with summarizing and updating follow-up tasks
2. Classic Outlook needs to also show the Loop Meeting Notes in the invite, so everybody can use the NEW way to organize a meeting, since ONLY Loop Meeting Notes are visible DURING the teams meeting
That's cos they are co-evolving and co-creating with the customer. Unless such products are tried and tested in real world, they won't get any better. But one can't deny the immense potential of these tools
Wow ❤ nemaipomenit!
The most unbelievable part of this presentation was the video streaming quality in the Teams example.
The integration into PowerPoint and Excel was really cool
For the first time Microsoft guys are showing new features that are already released to their customers, before we need to wait for months to get those new features where the story of public preview to general availability starts:). not all the features are available by now to us, but one-thousand-mile road starts with the first step so keep it up Microsoft.
A Copilot in Visual Studio that knows all of a project's files would be a game changer.
@@Lugmillord they have GitHub copilot but it is terrible
I think M365 and Copilot is so underrated. This launch should get more attention than the iPhone launch. Because, ultimately, it is going to be one of these launches that decides when you are replaced. I even think Microsoft is making this low key on purpose, so that all the bosses know what's going on but you don't.
Bosses know what's going on? Nah, bosses won't replace anybody, because somebody has to do the front end work. They don't understand the average job enough to tell copilot what to do.
😅😅😅😅😅 you are joking right? @@daveyp9885
@@daveyp9885 Agree! Bosses need us to tell them what to do! Bosses need to be worried, as Ai will replace them!
The two most important languages to learn? english... and python.
interesting cover of the Wave 2 features of MS 365 Copilot. curious to find out how this product evolves over time.
I really enjoyed this video! The insights on Wave 2 of Copilot are impressive and show a lot of potential. Looking forward to seeing how this evolves. Great job!
This is so beautiful. As a data analyst, I've noticed that some of the tasks I'm paid to do have become easier for clients to perform themselves. This might make it seem like my skills are no longer needed, but I can see the new opportunities this change has created. This has truly made the future of workflow brighter, and I can't thank Microsoft enough.
@@dominickishatingunimye9744 … come on
Hahaha homie, every 6 months AI will eat more and more of what you do.
If you are someone with ideas you could make them real easily, but most people are going to be losing their jobs.
Data analysts will be a dead job, along with all others , coding,, marketing, admin, etc. lol.
Thank for sharing👍
*Generated using Microsoft Copilot*
0:12 - 0:14: Satya Nadella greets the audience, expressing his excitement to be with them today.
0:15 - 0:22: Reflecting on the journey, Satya mentions it’s been 18 months since the announcement of Microsoft 365 Copilot and highlights the rapid learning and progress made.
0:22 - 0:34: Copilot’s impact: Satya explains how Copilot is transforming work for over 400 million Microsoft 365 users by organizing workflows and work artifacts.
0:39 - 0:46: Adoption growth: He shares data showing that daily usage of Copilot has nearly doubled quarter over quarter, with increasing customer deployments.
0:48 - 0:55: Rapid adoption: Satya notes that Copilot’s adoption rates are faster than any other new Microsoft 365 suite.
0:55 - 1:06: UI for AI: Satya describes Copilot as the user interface for AI, breaking down silos between work artifacts, communications, and business processes.
1:08 - 1:27: Scaling AI: He discusses how AI models become more valuable when fine-tuned with business data and workflows, emphasizing the importance of human-AI interaction.
1:31 - 1:38: Wave 2 announcement: Satya announces Wave 2 of Microsoft 365 Copilot, highlighting three major evolutions.
1:40 - 1:47: New AI system: The first evolution involves integrating the Web, Work, and Pages into a new AI system for knowledge work.
1:48 - 2:01: Pages introduction: Satya introduces Pages, an AI-powered canvas that transforms information from the Web and work into a collaborative space.
2:03 - 2:14: Historical context: He compares Pages to past platform shifts like the PC and the Web, which fundamentally changed work artifacts.
2:16 - 2:20: AI age artifact: Satya describes Pages as the first new artifact for the AI age.
2:21 - 2:32: Deep integration: The second evolution focuses on integrating Copilot deeply into everyday work canvases like Outlook, Excel, and PowerPoint.
2:35 - 2:45: Flow maintenance: Satya explains how Copilot keeps users in their flow with features like Narrative builder in PowerPoint, Python in Excel, and Prioritize my inbox in Outlook.
2:47 - 3:00: Copilot agents: The third evolution introduces Copilot agents, transforming bespoke interactions with siloed business applications into seamless Copilot agents.
3:00 - 3:07: Closing remarks: Satya expresses excitement about the new capabilities and hands over to Jared Spataro.
3:08 - 3:13: Jared Spataro’s introduction: Jared thanks Satya and expresses his excitement to discuss Copilot Wave 2.
3:15 - 3:26: Customer engagement: Jared highlights the deep engagement with nearly 1,000 customers, whose feedback has driven over 700 product updates and 150 new features.
3:29 - 3:45: Performance improvements: He mentions significant performance improvements, including moving to GPT4o, resulting in faster responses and higher satisfaction.
3:47 - 3:56: Feedback loop: Jared describes Copilot as the world’s best feedback loop for AI at work, with continuous improvements based on user input.
3:58 - 4:03: New capabilities: He announces the addition of new capabilities and models, including OpenAI o1 with advanced reasoning.
4:04 - 4:09: Wave 2 overview: Jared reiterates the three ways Copilot is evolving in Wave 2 and prepares to dive into the details.
4:11 - 4:18: BizChat & Copilot Pages: Jared introduces Copilot as the new UI for AI, combining the Web, Work, and Pages.
4:18 - 4:26: Pages as a digital artifact: He describes Pages as a dynamic, persistent canvas designed for multiplayer AI collaboration.
4:26 - 4:33: Demo introduction: Jared sets up a demo scenario involving an EV charging company exploring a business opportunity with LAX airport.
4:33 - 4:49: Web research: He demonstrates asking Copilot to gather basic information from the web, such as daily passenger numbers and EV charger parking spaces at LAX.
4:49 - 5:00: Creating a Page: Jared shows how to turn the gathered information into a Page, where you can work alone, with colleagues, or with Copilot.
5:00 - 5:18: Collaborative sharing: He explains how to share the Page with colleagues for further research, tagging them to start immediate collaboration.
5:20 - 5:34: Building the business case: While colleagues add industry news, Jared continues researching to build out the business case, with Copilot providing citations for verification.
5:36 - 5:43: Web to canvas: Jared summarizes how Copilot brings web information onto a collaborative canvas, enabling teamwork.
5:45 - 5:55: Pages availability: He announces that the Pages experience is now available to over 400 million users with a free web-grounded Microsoft Copilot account.
5:57 - 6:03: Efficiency gains: Jared highlights the efficiency of using Copilot for web research, saving multiple searches and effort.
6:04 - 6:19: Introduction to BizChat: He introduces BizChat, which integrates web, work, and business data into a cohesive workflow within Microsoft 365.
6:21 - 6:26: Organizational insights: BizChat turns organizational content into a rich database of information and insights.
6:28 - 6:40: Demo continuation: Jared pivots from web to work, asking Copilot to reference a previous plan to kickstart a new proposal.
6:43 - 6:47: Plan creation: Copilot pulls in deliverables, schedules, and owners, formatting them into a table on the Page.
6:50 - 6:58: Collaborative planning: Colleagues update the workback schedule and assign owners, demonstrating real-time collaboration.
7:00 - 7:11: Proposal outline: Jared moves on to the proposal outline, referencing a coworker’s meeting recording to extract customer requirements.
7:13 - 7:26: Meeting synthesis: Copilot synthesizes the meeting discussion, providing key takeaways in seconds.
7:29 - 7:37: Building the proposal: With the requirements in hand, Jared starts building the proposal, reusing a successful past proposal as a template.
7:40 - 7:48: Finalizing the proposal: Copilot updates the old proposal with new customer requirements, pulling everything together with a final click.
7:48 - 8:02: New work pattern: Jared emphasizes that Pages represents a new pattern of work, designed for human to AI to human collaboration on a dynamic, persistent canvas.
8:02 - 8:09: BizChat integration: He explains that Pages is the first step in a new design system for knowledge work, which integrates seamlessly with BizChat.
8:09 - 8:17: Reusable business assets: With BizChat, all data becomes a reusable business asset, allowing iterative collaboration with Copilot.
8:19 - 8:27: Daily habit: Jared notes that Copilot is becoming a daily habit in Microsoft 365 apps, enhancing personal productivity and saving time.
8:29 - 8:36: Transforming meetings: Customers report that Copilot in Teams has transformed meetings, and similar impacts are expected for Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook.
8:38 - 8:47: Excel’s importance: Jared highlights Excel as the front-end for business data, crucial for deriving value from ERP and CRM systems.
8:47 - 9:01: General availability: He announces that Copilot in Excel is now generally available, ready to enhance data analysis and productivity.
9:03 - 9:11: Revenue trends demo: The demo begins with importing data on product sales, pricing, and customer feedback from various sources into Excel.
9:11 - 9:26: Data shaping: With all raw data in one place, Copilot helps shape and analyze the numbers, starting with calculating monthly revenue by product.
9:27 - 9:36: Handling large data sets: Jared explains that while calculating revenue is routine, the large data set makes it unwieldy, so Copilot is asked to handle it.
9:36 - 9:50: Executing calculations: Copilot creates a plan, executes it, and shows its work, allowing for questions and iterations on the solution.
9:50 - 10:05: Adding results: Satisfied with the results, Jared adds the calculated revenue column to the spreadsheet.
10:07 - 10:18: New request: A new request involves understanding product category performance and ensuring each category sells at least $100,000 per month.
10:18 - 10:29: Creating a bar chart: Copilot creates a simple bar chart to visualize which product categories are selling best.
10:29 - 10:35: Conditional formatting: The chart uses conditional formatting to highlight product lines not meeting the $100K threshold.
10:37 - 10:46: Customer feedback analysis: Jared digs deeper into customer feedback to understand why some products aren’t selling well.
10:46 - 10:56: Top concerns: Copilot analyzes customer feedback and surfaces the top three concerns, identifying charging speed as a potential issue.
10:58 - 11:03: Highlighting reviews: Copilot highlights customer reviews mentioning charging speed for further analysis.
11:05 - 11:14: Comprehensive analysis: With Copilot’s help, Jared quickly analyzes a complex data set, providing a full picture of revenue trends for the business review.
11:14 - 11:20: Excel for financial analysts: Jared emphasizes the importance of Excel for financial analysts, who rely on it to mine data for business insights.
11:20 - 11:33: Python’s role: He highlights Python’s growing importance for advanced analysis, modeling, and data visualization, and announces Copilot in Excel with Python.
11:33 - 11:45: Democratizing Python: Copilot in Excel with Python democratizes powerful capabilities, allowing users to leverage Python without needing to code.
11:48 - 11:56: Revenue forecast: Jared sets up a scenario where Copilot assists in creating an annual revenue forecast, a typically time-intensive task.
11:58 - 12:08: Advanced analysis: Copilot writes and interprets Python code to perform advanced analysis on three years of historical sales data.
12:08 - 12:22: Experimentation workspace: Copilot opens a new workspace for experimentation, providing insights without altering the original data.
12:25 - 12:35: Executing analysis: Copilot previews its reasoning, creates a plan, and executes it by running Python code, giving a quick picture of the numbers.
12:38 - 12:46: Iterating on work: Jared asks Copilot to forecast annual revenue for the next two years, with Copilot creating a plan and running Python code.
12:49 - 13:02: Editing Python code: Users can directly edit the Python code in the workbook, showcasing the integration of Python into Excel.
13:05 - 13:15: Prioritizing customers: Jared asks Copilot to rank customers based on upsell opportunity to meet revenue goals, using Python for the analysis.
13:18 - 13:32: Analysis workspace: Copilot prioritizes metrics and provides a preview of the data it will use, jumping back to the analysis workspace.
13:32 - 13:40: Prioritized table: Within moments, Copilot produces a prioritized table of customers based on upsell opportunities.
13:44 - 13:54: Visualization and methodology: Copilot creates a chart and explains the weighting methodology used for customer ranking.
13:57 - 14:02: Detailed summary: Jared highlights how Copilot helps create a detailed data summary without writing any code.
14:06 - 14:07: Collaboration: Jared concludes by noting that the report is ready to be sent to the sales team for collaboration.
14:07 - 14:16: PowerPoint for storytelling: Jared transitions to PowerPoint, introducing Narrative builder as a tool for creating and telling stories.
14:17 - 14:22: Creative partner: Copilot acts as a creative partner, helping to develop the structure and flow of presentations while keeping users in control.
14:22 - 14:35: Brand Manager: With Brand Manager, users can easily create on-brand presentations, bringing their stories to life.
14:39 - 14:49: Pitch deck creation: Jared demonstrates asking Copilot to create a pitch deck in a company template to attract and retain shoppers.
14:49 - 15:05: Draft outline: Copilot starts with a draft outline, allowing users to reorder, delete, or add topics to ensure a solid structure before creating the presentation.
15:08 - 15:14: Adding sections: Jared adds sections on key value propositions and customer testimonials to the outline.
15:18 - 15:26: Slide creation: Copilot plans and creates slides, crafting titles, draft copy, and pulling in images from the corporate library.
15:26 - 15:34: On-brand presentation: The presentation is formatted using the company’s PowerPoint template to ensure it is on-brand.
15:38 - 15:50: Iterating with Copilot: Jared iterates with Copilot, requesting images and receiving several options from the company’s approved image library.
15:52 - 15:57: AI-generated images: Copilot can also provide AI-generated images using Designer and DALL-E 3.
15:59 - 16:03: Slide design options: PowerPoint offers several slide design options aligned with company brand guidelines.
16:05 - 16:17: Final presentation: Copilot adds speaker notes, slide transitions, and animations, resulting in a professional, on-brand presentation.
16:19 - 16:24: Focus on pitching: With Copilot handling design, writing, and editing, users can focus on delivering their pitch.
16:27 - 16:35: Teams meeting pattern: Jared discusses how Microsoft Teams has normalized a new pattern for meetings, with productive conversations happening in the chat.
16:37 - 16:44: Meeting insights: Copilot in Teams can now reason over both the meeting transcript and chat to provide a complete picture of the discussion.
16:45 - 16:48: RFP discussion: Jared sets up a scenario where a team discusses a customer’s RFP in a meeting.
16:50 - 16:55: Missed questions: As the meeting wraps, Copilot captures the conversation, ensuring no important questions are missed.
16:56 - 17:02: Question follow-up: Copilot scans the transcript and chat for unanswered questions, providing a list for follow-up.
17:04 - 17:13: Closing the loop: With a list of open questions, users can follow up and close the loop with the team.
17:15 - 17:19: Complete capture: Copilot ensures every part of the meeting is captured, so no idea or contribution is left behind.
17:23 - 17:29: OneDrive integration: Jared introduces Copilot in OneDrive, highlighting its ability to help users find exactly what they need quickly and easily.
17:31 - 17:37: Content summarization: Copilot summarizes content and answers questions without needing to open files, enhancing efficiency.
17:39 - 17:50: Comparing files: Jared demonstrates asking Copilot to compare two files with similar names to identify the latest product specs for a customer.
17:52 - 18:03: Clear summaries: Within seconds, Copilot provides a clear summary highlighting the differences, ensuring users can confidently select the correct file.
18:06 - 18:14: Word for writing: Jared transitions to Word, where Copilot acts as a powerful writing and editing partner, accessing emails, meetings, and colleague content.
18:15 - 18:28: Iterative co-creation: Users can iterate and co-create with Copilot, repurposing valuable content and building on existing work.
18:31 - 18:37: RFP response: Jared sets up a scenario where Copilot helps create an RFP response by referencing the latest product specs and approved formats.
18:39 - 18:43: Meeting details: Copilot pulls in details from a meeting about the customer’s needs to enhance the RFP response.
18:45 - 18:49: Grounded responses: Copilot’s ability to ground responses in the right content ensures high-quality results.
18:52 - 19:02: Draft creation: Copilot creates a plan, executes it, attaches a security label, and produces a first draft of the document within seconds.
19:04 - 19:06: Time-saving: This process, which could take hours manually, is completed quickly with Copilot.
19:08 - 19:16: Iterating on the draft: Jared iterates on Copilot’s work, asking it to reference an email for updated pricing and pull in a discount.
19:18 - 19:29: Strengthening the proposal: Jared adds more information on product benefits and certifications, organizing it into a table.
19:33 - 19:42: Polished response: Working with Copilot, users can create a polished RFP response with the most relevant and up-to-date information.
19:44 - 19:45: Winning business: The final step is to win the business with the completed proposal.
19:47 - 19:56: Inbox management: Jared discusses the challenges of managing an inbox and introduces “Prioritize my inbox” to transform email management.
20:00 - 20:09: New inbox: The new inbox ensures emails serve the user and their goals, rather than the other way around.
20:11 - 20:18: Prioritizing emails: Copilot in Outlook helps prioritize emails by analyzing content and job context, highlighting the most important messages.
20:20 - 20:32: Sorting by priority: Users can sort emails by priority based on Copilot’s analysis, making it easier to manage important communications.
20:35 - 20:43: Significant emails: Jared demonstrates how Copilot identifies significant emails, such as one from a new customer, and highlights necessary actions.
20:45 - 20:51: Teaching Copilot: Users can teach Copilot to prioritize emails from key customers, ensuring they are always top priority.
20:53 - 21:00: Inbox partnership: Copilot acts as a partner in managing the inbox, helping users stay on top of important emails and tasks.
21:02 - 21:13: Outlook mobile: Jared switches to Outlook mobile, demonstrating how Copilot helps draft responses on the go, making it easier to be productive on your phone.
21:15 - 21:23: Suggested responses: Copilot analyzes the email and offers suggested responses, which users can select and customize.
21:26 - 21:33: Tone adjustment: Jared shows how to ask Copilot to adjust the tone of the email to make it more formal for a customer.
21:36 - 21:43: Editing assistance: Users can edit the email themselves or ask Copilot for help, highlighting sections and specifying what to include.
21:47 - 21:54: Finalizing the email: Once satisfied with the edits, users can accept the changes, and the email is ready to send.
21:57 - 22:04: Introduction to Copilot agents: Jared introduces Copilot agents, which automate and execute business processes, breaking free from siloed applications.
22:06 - 22:13: Business process transformation: Copilot agents enable organizations to transform business processes by integrating them into the flow of work.
22:15 - 22:24: Agent capabilities: Agents can reason, remember, be trained, and know when to ask for help, ranging from simple to fully autonomous.
22:26 - 22:31: Agent types: Jared explains the different types of agents, from simple prompt-response to advanced agents that automate tasks.
22:33 - 22:40: Autonomous agents: Sophisticated agents can orchestrate other agents, providing a higher level of automation and efficiency.
22:43 - 22:48: Integration into workflow: Copilot agents bring the power of automation directly into the workflow, working in the background.
22:50 - 22:55: Ease of creation: Agents are fully managed and orchestrated by Copilot, making them incredibly easy to create and deploy.
22:58 - 23:03: Scaling teams: Copilot agents build capacity, enabling teams to scale their operations like never before.
23:05 - 23:11: Field service agent: Jared demonstrates a field service agent that provides step-by-step instructions for troubleshooting error codes.
23:12 - 23:21: Real-time assistance: The field service agent accesses product knowledge to give real-time instructions, enhancing on-site support.
23:23 - 23:27: Creating an agent: Jared shows how simple it is to create an agent using Agent Builder, describing the desired functionality.
23:29 - 23:37: Connecting to knowledge sources: The agent is connected to SharePoint to access the necessary knowledge for troubleshooting.
23:40 - 23:46: Immediate use: The agent is built in seconds and can be used immediately or further configured to fit specific needs.
23:47 - 23:58: Expanding knowledge base: Users can expand the agent’s knowledge base by connecting to additional resources like SharePoint sites or other data sources.
24:02 - 24:04: Customization: The agent’s name or image can be updated to align with the company’s branding, ensuring consistency.
24:04 - 24:11: Testing and creating agents: Users can test the agent or simply hit create to finalize it, ensuring it respects Microsoft 365 and SharePoint security permissions.
24:14 - 24:24: Sharing in BizChat: The Copilot agent is now ready in BizChat and can be shared with the team for collaborative use.
24:27 - 24:31: SharePoint’s evolution: Jared highlights SharePoint’s role as a leading solution for enterprise knowledge and business processes.
24:34 - 24:42: Turning SharePoint sites into agents: Every SharePoint site can now be turned into an agent, leveraging its vast knowledge repository beyond natural language search.
24:45 - 24:55: Creating an agent from SharePoint: Jared demonstrates creating an agent from a SharePoint site, library, or folder to handle customer records and maintenance reports.
24:57 - 25:09: Agent capabilities: The agent can answer questions, reason over material, and take action, functioning like a well-informed teammate.
25:11 - 25:24: Immediate use: Within seconds, the Copilot agent is ready to be used or shared with others, enhancing team collaboration.
25:26 - 25:31: Adding to Teams chat: Jared adds the agent to a Teams chat, making SharePoint artifacts accessible and useful for the team.
25:33 - 25:39: Real-time responses: The agent can be mentioned in chat like a teammate, responding in real time to new information and questions.
25:41 - 25:46: Further customization: Jared takes it a step further by editing the agent to take specific actions on behalf of the team.
25:49 - 26:01: Customizing in Copilot Studio: In Copilot Studio, users can customize the agent’s knowledge and actions, such as placing orders for new parts.
26:05 - 26:12: Connecting to Dynamics 365: The agent is connected to Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management to handle procurement tasks.
26:15 - 26:21: Updating and deploying: The agent is updated and brought back to the Teams chat to assist in solving customer issues.
26:24 - 26:32: Ordering parts: Jared demonstrates asking the agent to order a recommended part, with the agent confirming before proceeding.
26:32 - 26:34: Task completion: Once confirmed, the agent completes the task, showcasing its efficiency and utility.
26:36 - 26:42: Conclusion: Jared wraps up by emphasizing how Copilot serves as the new UI for AI, breaking down silos between work artifacts, communications, and business processes.
26:44 - 26:50: Pages and BizChat: He highlights how web data and work data come together in Pages, the first digital artifact for the AI era, and how BizChat turns all data into reusable business assets.
26:52 - 27:03: Rapid improvements: Jared mentions the rapid improvements in Copilot within Microsoft 365 apps, including Python in Excel, Narrative builder in PowerPoint, and Prioritize my inbox in Outlook.
27:05 - 27:12: Copilot agents: He notes that Copilot agents enhance every business process, helping to increase revenue and reduce costs.
27:15 - 27:28: Wave 2 preview: Jared concludes by stating that this is just the beginning of Wave 2, with more exciting developments to be revealed in the next two months.
I REALLY want Copilot to succeed, but the promises made about it do not always materialise in reality. However, I am rooting for it, especially to be far more intuitive, far more native in all its own apps and have relevant real-work use cases
Handy to use AI to generate all content. You don't need "real" speakers at all anymore! What tech was used to make this video?
They're saying "Generally available" but I can't find them in Excel or PowerPoint even after updating to the latest version. How's it generally available if we can't see it yet?
you have to subscribe in the copilot plan
probably is GA for enterprise users with copilot plans
Copilot is really working great!!
We don’t live on the same planet.
I'm glad you're happy with your little gnome
Exciting news, time to teach people even more on Copilot! Congratulations to the team.
Greaaatt!! All of them are awesome, but the Pages and Agent on Sharepoint are my favorites!
Copilot is truly amazing
This is very cool and easy thank you Microsoft ❤
Getting excited about the cool new charts they showed when demonstrating Python in Excel? Well sorry, but those aren't Excel charts, they're Python charts. You can't click on the chart and adjust the formatting - it's only editable via Python code. They basically just slapped a viewer for ChatGPT data analytics into Excel. If they wanted to do things properly, they'd have fully integrated the Python charts into Excel so they could be edited just like any other chart.
i think they wont need to do that cause they know open ai will evolve and there is simply no need for coding.
Is the data accessed by Copilot, of any organization, ensures privacy? or the knowledge is again distributed across its intelligence?
Why it's not available for all 365 subscriptions?
Because you are poor and you need to have copilot pro
What funny is microsoft just made this announcement and have changed most of the things announced here.
Which plan type is required to use all of the presented functions? In my case, I have a small science team.
@@Mring505 ‘Copilot for 365’ is an upsell package.
Onetime purchase 12 months @ $30/m.
Not just one. You need to buy a lot of different copilots. For example, if you already subscribe to office 365 + copilot and you want the teams stuff, you need to also upgrade to teams premium and another copilot for teams. That does not include copilot for planner though. For that, you need to get planner plan 3 + copilot for another 30 bucks per user. You're well over 100 bucks a month per user for everything they have shown.
Shhh that's the quiet part.
Do you have any plans to include Onenote on the family of products addressed by Copilot?
I feel lucky by having AI in my device which can help solve programming language it's easy to discover the world as well but subscription troubles a lot.
@@siddharthtiwari4546 what troubles you about the subscription?
❤❤❤❤❤
I use CoPilot built into my Microsoft Edge browser - where I think most people use it. Can it do all this?
Copilot to onedrive - when will it be available? Not reached Norway it seems. Not on SharePoint eighter.
Will Office scripts move from typescript to python?
Si el ordenador te indica ser formateado y le quitas la batería del reloj y la vuelves a colocar el sistema se reinicia correctamente .King iluminatti android.
What do the personal 365 and copilotpro people get? Sweet FA?
why do you guys not care about access, power bi ect?
many of these new functions are not available in my excel version. is it open to all countries already or not?
Wave 2 since they missed the first wave. Big time !
Esto también estará para Office 2024 Retail?? ¿?
Half of these functions are not available if you have a personal subscription.
We know that Copilot is run by Clippy.
text contains "slow". I thought, it will do better by reading the data and getting to the sentiment with LLM!
si el ejército te adelanta la hora del teléfono por más de las horas estimadas en la duración de la batería te lo apagan.
me encanta que habiliten grupos de trabajos
I have Microsoft 365 But idk in Microsft 365 what to do?
Copilot page actually Rag with internet content..
The update would be nice, if it worked properly. But the android app of copilot now only works for 50%. I can't use it anymore in other languages then English, I can't start a new conversation. The voice only works sometimes, and when it does, it uses the call volume instead of the speaker volume.
When chat gpt 4o for copilot ? and when copilot live ?
forget gpt 4o, what about gpt-01 preview or gpt-01 full at some point??
@@chuckkoehler9526 3:56
@@chuckkoehler9526 As soon as they have the hardware to support the world's office employees using it. Nvidia is having hard time keeping up with the big chip orders, and it's holding AI companies back.
@@chuckkoehler9526 GPT-o1 is great, but i think we need specific models for specific tasks. GPT-4o-mini for easy to answer standard questions to achieve fast response times, gpt-4o for mor complex tasks or questions and gpt-o1 for complex questions and tasks that need a lot of reasoning.
@@chuckkoehler9526 so when?
Internet should be turned off every one hour for one hour in offices, so people can work without distraction.
There should be a device access removed automatically for one hour so people can talk face to face while sitting in office.
copilot for data analyst
Macrosofit você é muito especial e fábrica Xbox séries s Xbox 360 e Xbox one Xbox séries x obrigado pelo Xbox séries s obrigado macrosofit por você obrigado
When will it be available in Europe and localized in French, German, and Italian ?
Works on mac?
Microsoft can work more💜💜💜💜💜💜💜
Bonsoir. Je viens d'acheter un surface book mais c'est seulement l'écran qui se recharge, le clavier reste toujours à 0%. Svp est-ce que vous m'aider?
RIP to all the Data analysts
Please.. why you block resize taskbar on win 11? We need again you dont need to change it from windows xp , 7 and 10.. its a main tool from all the time! Add differe t tools but not delete all important tools. Stop doing strange things.
Did your write your script using Copilot? Sound as dull it is.
Great work 👍🏻
Co-Pilot agent will make me cancle my OpenAI Pro account. I wonder if OpenAI is that happy to see MS implement that agent in their 365 suite.
So My Governments Work (Job)Eg EU & US & Office App Must be Work Copilot. I will learn flow ❤Please teach me .
Actually user has learned more in deep copilot preferably issues.
And all that for just 299.99 per user, per month!
300???? Really? I though 30
Office programs are complex enough, this update needs a new learning curve and only professionals will understand it quickly.
I don't know if you will take my comment into consideration but if you really want to serve your customers you should put two versions, a "normal version" (which we are used to) and an "expert version" and lessons and tutorials should be distributed everywhere around it.
So you dont need any skill any more othen that copilot?
The skill is in knowing what copilot missed.
Just like when we were waiting for hololens 3, the SOC in 2 was too low powered. Literally as technology for that product was starting to mature and processing was all that was needed you gave up. Instead of doing the quality work that your company speaks often about. You do the exact thing you're known for. Building subpar technology and pulling out right when the next revision was going to be usable. Why would we trust you to stick with a technology like co-pilot into maturity. Please continue to mess up until D.o.D, and the commercial sectors are pushed to a more reliable and stable company. We will remember Microsoft as the most annoying and can't get right company in history.
Could you please,let translate this into Arabic ?
This will completely change how work gets done. I hope all company will adopt so soon as possible.
Wow
YOU'VE LOCKED ME OUT OF MY ENTIRE ACCOUNT AND MY PC AND I'M IN THE MIDDLE OF PLANNING MY MOTHER'S FUNERAL!! I HAVE NO ACCESS TO ANYTHING!!!
WHAT THE ACTUAL ****????
gpt 4o on copilot when?
this is exiting...... Cat't wait to share with my colleagues
Cool if Windows Microsoft will have anti glitch system which will control things all the time.
Sometimes turn laptop and happens glitch, things not go well as usual. Why? U didn't touch anything at all, but glitch happened and things go in wrong direction from this moment when you pushed button start. it take time minutes hours you trying to fix, everything is going to ruined morning or day....
Monitoring and controlling glitches and creation perfect smooth windows OS can really make much days better , just because everything is ok.
I like Microsoft
voice is the next operating system. i don’t want to do this all by typing chats
I very much disagree
@@royscott5884 Voice is a game-changer for older folks who can't type as fast anymore. It makes it so much easier for them to get their point across just by talking
Translators are losing their jobs, Developers and Analysts the next. If you had a team of 10 members, companies will start reducing significantly in order to save costs.
❤️💜❤️💜
Did your write your script using Copilot? Sounds as dull it is. Why would you introduce Pages? Bacause you canot introduce into Word, ?
Let's go Spyware OS!
👍👍👍👍👍👍
I cant delete copilot so I came to thumbs down and complain
I work in 365 adoption and this is all leading to AI automation. General office workers can't be trained quickly enough to use Copilot. I love it but they're gonna have to automate it in the apps.
MY Old PC is slow ASF with all these new Windows updates sometimes I wish I can run all your guys Apps as Run this programs in compatibility mode for: 256 Colours and Run in 640x 480 Resolution.
Everytime I open a Program it's like I'm walking behind my GrandPa in a 1 way passage....I can't even Ctrl + Alt + Del even to the left. Gone are the Days of Having a 4GB PC as fair Rugud device.
Copilot on 365 apps on Mac when?
It's always been there. Just like the windows version you need copilot pro subscription also.
Welcome from Dominican Republic
@@isaacramirezoficial free
Imagine AI researching content on the web generated by AI which will eventually be published on the web then other AI agents do research consuming stuff generated by AI to be eventually published to the web for other AI to use..... Read more....
AI is probablistic by design and people are betting their jobs, clients, lives and the world on fancy marketed UIs that basically depend on multiple layers of probability.
The fact that AI researchers are reluctant to use AI generated content for further training should be enough to stop you from using AI.
Anyways, keep making these companies rich 😉. In the unavoidable event that something goes wrong, none of these companies will be all teeth, fancy UI and transitions.
בלינדאין יהיו שיתופי פעולה זמניים בין יוצרים ואמנים לאנשי מקצוע באותו מחיר עם מיקרוסופט קאש. האפלקציה תצמח ב20%.
MS365 copilot build last year
Love Microsoft
Wave II!
In teams it's really underwhelming especially in French ...
Learn American
Woow 😮
and then your client uses ai to read your proposal 😉
👍🏽😎🤖
Interesting ad.
Watches a company's video about their products.. calls it an ad 🤦♂
Uau
Recall is Malware
3:10 Jared Spataro the RUclips 480p makes you look like an A.i
I'm 1:28 1:29 1:30 1:30 1:30 1:32 1:33
i just want co pilot to be able to go back into my pic and emails and find something