Q: What鈥檚 the deal with Copilot? What will it do for me?
A: If you鈥檙e a Windows user, you鈥檝e seen Microsoft pushing its artificial intelligence technology called 鈥淐opilot鈥 everywhere. It鈥檚 the technology corporation’s entry into the race to build an AI platform in the latest internet “gold rush.”
What is Copilot?
Copilot is Microsoft鈥檚 umbrella name for its AI-assistant, built to be your conversational helper within Windows, productivity apps like Word and Excel, as well as the Edge browser.
In practice, it means:
You can ask it questions in plain language or 鈥渃hat鈥 with it, and it will answer like any other AI assistant.
It can integrate with Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams and use what鈥檚 in your files, emails and chats (if you grant access) to produce summaries, drafts and recommendations.
In Windows/Edge, 鈥淐opilot鈥 may also act as a side assistant: summarize webpages, help you navigate, even analyze what鈥檚 on your screen or in your camera (with permission) via features like Copilot Vision.
What it can do for you
Think of Copilot as a helper built into tools you already use that can reduce tedious work and speed up your routine tasks.
- Write stuff for you 鈥 Need to draft an email, letter or even a flyer? Copilot can give you a draft version so you鈥檙e not staring at a blank page. You can then tweak it to sound more like you, or you can ask it to improve something that you鈥檝e written.
- Summarize text 鈥 Get a quick overview of a long email, article or contract and understand those ridiculous 鈥楾erms of Service鈥 agreements.
- Analyze numbers 鈥 If you鈥檙e looking at a massive spreadsheet and wondering what the numbers really mean, Copilot can explain trends in plain English or create a quick chart.
- Make presentations 鈥 Copilot can pull together the basics and suggest layouts, so you spend less time fiddling with PowerPoint.
- Look things up quickly 鈥 Instead of jumping between Google searches and guessing which link to click, you can ask Copilot a straight question and get a direct answer.
- Help while browsing 鈥 If you鈥檙e on a webpage that feels overwhelming, you can ask Copilot to explain it, give you the highlights or compare it to something else.
It鈥檚 like having a very efficient assistant, but you鈥檒l always want to double-check its work, as all AI assistants can make rather significant mistakes.
Do you need it?
The answer to this question relies heavily on your needs.
Do you frequently write content, proposals, internal documents, etc.? Are you a heavy Microsoft 365 user (Word, Excel, Outlook, Teams)? Do you routinely analyze data and create reports for others from that data?
If you answered yes to any of these questions, you鈥檇 certainly benefit from using some type of AI assistant.
If you鈥檙e a casual computer user who mainly surfs the web and checks a small amount of email, or do not use a computer for work, you may not find much value in it.
Potential drawbacks
This technology is still in its infancy, and they can suffer from hallucinations; essentially, they occasionally make things up. There are also privacy issues when it comes to your sensitive files, chats, etc.
Today鈥檚 reality
Getting a decent understanding of what AI assistants can and can鈥檛 do is something I highly recommend to everyone.
If you don鈥檛 want AI that integrates so much into your daily computer use, other standalone options from OpenAI (Chat GPT), Google (Gemini) and Anthropic (Claude) are easy for new users to try.
Ken Colburn is founder and CEO of聽. Ask any tech question on聽.
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