Over the holiday season, Microsoft quietly launched its Copilot app Android And internal control Department, along with iPadOS. The app gives users access to Copilot, formerly known as Bing Chat, which works similarly to OpenAI’s ChatGPT.
Like other AI-powered chatbots, you can type a question or prompt and receive the AI-generated answers. Users can leverage the AI assistant to craft emails, compose stories or scripts, summarize complex texts, create personalized travel itineraries, write and update resumes for jobs, and more. Additionally, you can use the app’s Image Creator feature, powered by DALL E 3, to explore new styles and ideas, organize social media content, develop brand elements, create logo designs, create custom backgrounds, create a portfolio, and visualize film and stories. Video and more.
![Three screenshots of the Copilot iOS app](https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/copilot-ios.png)
Image credits: Microsoft
“By combining the power of GPT-4 with the imaginative capabilities of DALL·E 3, Copilot not only improves your design workflow, but can also take your creativity to inspiring new heights,” the app description says.
With Copilot, you can access OpenAI’s GPT-4 technology for free, which is very important because OpenAI’s GPT implementation runs on GPT-3.5 technology and charges for access to GPT-4.
Copilot’s mobile launch comes with Microsoft renaming Bing Chat to Copilot in November. It’s worth noting that before Copilot’s mobile launch, you could access similar functionality via the Bing Chat feature on the Bing app. Microsoft is likely planning to replace Bing with Copilot, but the tech giant has not shared anything on this front yet.
The mobile phone launch also comes as it already happened with Copilot Available online For some time now. With this latest launch, Microsoft is looking to offer Copilot as a standalone service and expand its reach further.