Writing/replying to emails -- got it, but that's not really managing emails. Organizing and analyzing emails counts as managing, but I am not aware copilot can do that. Use case example: sort through my 100,000 unorganized emails, create folders by AI created subject area (such as online orders, condo association emails, friends, tax related, etc) and place emails in those folders (or labels or whatever). Use case #2: search through my 100,000 unorganized emails and create a report that includes when my condo association wrote or replied to anything having to do with our fire code violations and planning a fire alarm system that meets code, create a table showing which dates which condo association trustee wrote anything about the matter, when the Boston fire department replied, etc. That type of thing helps manage emails and do deep analysis of complex subjects that are spread over multiple threads. Anything on that?
Great video but I wonder if this AI will effect our brain function in thinking and producing advancement in work. Also it is very expensive for a per user license and can't imagin companies will pay their employees to have a mchine think for them. The argument for using AI is more productivity and reduction in head count. But is this righ?
Thanks! Is there anything else to do in order to launch CoPilot or does it come standard once you have Microsoft 365? I’ve stumbled onto CoPilot in Edge and Excel and would really love to use it for drafting my technical White-papers, memos in Word etc.
I realize this is an example, but there is something intensely vulgar and dehumanizing about communicating with other people this way. As if, through the all too limited socializing we already do, we need more abstraction to disconnect and dehumanize our interactions.
Writing/replying to emails -- got it, but that's not really managing emails. Organizing and analyzing emails counts as managing, but I am not aware copilot can do that. Use case example: sort through my 100,000 unorganized emails, create folders by AI created subject area (such as online orders, condo association emails, friends, tax related, etc) and place emails in those folders (or labels or whatever). Use case #2: search through my 100,000 unorganized emails and create a report that includes when my condo association wrote or replied to anything having to do with our fire code violations and planning a fire alarm system that meets code, create a table showing which dates which condo association trustee wrote anything about the matter, when the Boston fire department replied, etc. That type of thing helps manage emails and do deep analysis of complex subjects that are spread over multiple threads. Anything on that?
Great point. Is there any solution that might be close to that?
Great video but I wonder if this AI will effect our brain function in thinking and producing advancement in work. Also it is very expensive for a per user license and can't imagin companies will pay their employees to have a mchine think for them. The argument for using AI is more productivity and reduction in head count. But is this righ?
I agree with you. AI has a long way to go
Can Copilot add/remove flags/tags from emails like "Respond", "Follow-up", "Read" for implementing Inbox Zero?
Thanks! Is there anything else to do in order to launch CoPilot or does it come standard once you have Microsoft 365? I’ve stumbled onto CoPilot in Edge and Excel and would really love to use it for drafting my technical White-papers, memos in Word etc.
Copilot for Microsoft 365 is an add-on you need to buy
Do you need pro copilot...we have copilot in our work Microsoft 365 package but I don't see any of these copilot extras.
Yes as far as I can see where I work, these are part of the premium package.
All this you can do with a free copilot version or free Gemini or ChatGPT, except you need an extra copy paste,
This is a really good video . Complete , accurate and easy to understand. Thanks Jonathan.
Thank you
Great video .... Thank you !!!!
Thanks for this video 👍🏻
Thanks Maria
👍👍👍👍
Great video..
I realize this is an example, but there is something intensely vulgar and dehumanizing about communicating with other people this way. As if, through the all too limited socializing we already do, we need more abstraction to disconnect and dehumanize our interactions.
I completely understand your view on this. I suppose it’s trying to save us time in our very busy lives
Great! I really enjoy your videos