microsoft copilot, the company’s AI-powered workflow companion, is getting an upgrade.Virtual assistant will be integrated soon OpenAI Batch of latest tools including new and improved tools GPT-4 TurboThis promises to progressively increase the usefulness of your app.
Yusuf Mehdi, vice president and chief consumer marketing officer at Microsoft, said: blog On Tuesday, the company announced that it had “begun testing” the integration and that new features would be rolled out soon (the announcement said this would happen at some point “in the coming weeks”).
“With our sights set on 2024, we are committed to bringing even more innovation and advanced capabilities to Copilot, providing cutting-edge ways to benefit from AI,” Medhi added.
GPT-4 Turbo is announced OpenAI’s first Dev Day (temporarily just before the company) fell into anarchy It was widely considered one of the most exciting developments at the conference (resulting in the short-lived firing of CEO Sam Altman). The new and improved large-scale language model includes several fundamental improvements over the original GPT-4. First, a larger “context window” (In this case 128K), which means it can hold a wider range of information. At the same time, later knowledge is also cut off (so we know more recently). As a result, you can handle longer prompts from your users and provide them with better, more informed insights.
In the context of integration with Copilot, Microsoft ( Close business partner with OpenAI) claims to offer users a better, more streamlined work experience. Mehdi said the GPT-4 integration will allow users to “tackle more complex and long-running tasks” and get better responses to their queries and needs through a virtual assistant.
Microsoft continues to steadily produce AI-powered products, but the financial success of those products is not always guaranteed.Earlier this year, the company Struggling to make money with Github Copilot iteration is a coding assistant marketed specifically to software developers. Despite its early popularity, the tool was very expensive to run and the company was not recouping the amount it spent. A few months later, Github CEO Thomas Dohmke said: told semaphor The company was actually “pleased with the increase in product margins,” but was conspicuously silent on details.
Microsoft Copilot has more tools and integrations, and costs $30 per month for enterprise customers, so you can expect it to outperform its digital counterpart in this regard. At least enterprise users get more bang for their buck, and that’s never a bad thing.