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Microsoft Copilot has rapidly evolved into a powerful AI-driven tool designed to enhance productivity across various Microsoft applications. Competing in the race of AI, the company has recently unveiled new features, keeping the service up to date. The features make up a big overhaul of its Copilot experience today, adding voice and vision capabilities to transform it into a more personalised AI assistant.
While bringing new features to its AI is exciting, Microsoft Copilot is also getting new looks and feels. Copilot is being redesigned across mobile, the web, and the dedicated Windows app into a user experience that’s more card-based. In the blog, Mustafa Suleyman, CEO Microsoft AI states, “Copilot now looks unlike anything I’ve seen from Microsoft before, with an interface that is a big departure from what exists right now. It’s a lot warmer, with a personalised Copilot Discover page that’s more useful and inviting than a text entry prompt for a chatbot. Microsoft is customising this entire Copilot homepage based on your conversation history, and over time, it will include useful searches, tips, and relevant information.”
Copilot Voice: Microsoft is making it easier to connect with your companion using Copilot Voice. It is an intuitive and natural way to brainstorm on the go, ask a quick question or even just vent at the end of a tough day. Your companion will be personal to you, with four voice options to choose from.
Copilot Voice
Think Deeper: Copilot can now reason through more complex questions. This feature looks similar to the OpenAI o1 model. The Think Deeper feature also takes more time before responding, allowing Copilot to deliver detailed and step-by-step answers to challenging questions. The company has designed it to be helpful for all kinds of practical and everyday challenges, like comparing two complex options side by side. Should I move to this city or that? What type of car best suits my needs? And so on. It’s an early Copilot Skill that’s still undergoing development, so we’ve placed it in our experimental Copilot Labs to test and get feedback.
Copilot Vision: This introduces a groundbreaking way to interact with a computer. Copilot Vision can see what you’re viewing and engage with you in real time. It comprehends both the text and images on a webpage, offering answers, suggestions, and assistance without interrupting your workflow. For instance, if you’re furnishing a new apartment, Copilot Vision can help you search for furniture, choose the right colour scheme, explore various options like rugs or throws, and even recommend how to arrange the items you’re considering.
Cpilot Vision
Microsoft also stated that the Copilot Vision sessions are entirely opt-in and brief. None of the content Copilot Vision engages with is stored or used for training — the moment you end your session, data is permanently discarded.
Copilot Daily: Copilot Daily helps you kick off your morning with a summary of news and weather, all read in your favourite Copilot Voice, with more options like reminders of what’s coming soon. It’s an antidote for that familiar feeling of information overload. Clean, simple and easy to digest. Copilot Daily will only pull from authorised content sources. The company is working with partners such as Reuters, Axel Springer, Hearst Magazines, USA TODAY Network and Financial Times, and plans to add more sources over time. It will also add additional personalisation and controls in Copilot Daily over time.
Personalised Discover
Personalised Discover: Not sure where to start? Copilot Discover helps you get going, offering both a handy guide to its useful features and conversation starters, making jumping in simpler than ever. With your permission, these jumping off points are customised based on your interactions with other Microsoft services and will be further personalised over time according to your conversation history.