Microsoft Launches Microsoft 365 Copilot

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Offline Khan Ehsanul Hoque

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Microsoft Launches Microsoft 365 Copilot
« on: March 21, 2023, 09:43:19 AM »
Microsoft Launches Microsoft 365 Copilot

Copilot is all about leveraging the power of AI technology based on GPT-4 to reuse information stored in Microsoft 365 to perform tasks. The idea is that the AI can take care of creating basic documents and leave users to refine and complete the content. In effect, Copilot is a kind of personal assistant on steroids.

Microsoft’s demo was compelling, but I still came away with a nagging doubt whether I will use Copilot when it’s available. For instance, the OWA demonstration of Copilot deciding how to prioritization email in a busy inbox reminded me of previous Microsoft attempts to help users impose order on inboxes with the Clutter feature and then Focused Inbox. Maybe it’ll be a case of third-time lucky.

On the surface, I am a classic example of a person that will benefit from Copilot. My data is stored in Microsoft 365. I use apps like OWA, Teams, SharePoint Online, and OneDrive for Business. I work on Word documents, Excel spreadsheets, and PowerPoint presentations daily. The large language model that Microsoft will deploy in Azure to service the queries generated by Copilot and respond to apps with suggestions should cater for my every need. But yet, I still have doubts.

Perhaps it’s just the nature of demos. I reminded myself midway through the magic that what I was watching was a carefully produced show put on by Microsoft executives rehearsed to within an inch of their lives using content crafted to generate the best possible results. The demonstration exhibited perfection of a kind seldom found in real life. I wondered if the way I work and the content I generate will result in such wonderful documents, spreadsheets, and presentations. And even more pertinently, how will the AI make sense of the information stored by the average Office user?

After all, GPT-4 depends on the content it knows about and the context delivered by Copilot. If someone asks Copilot to generate a project report about Contoso and not much can be found about Contoso in Exchange Online, SharePoint Online, OneDrive for Business, or Teams, then GPT-4 will probably generate something that’s banal and uninteresting, not to say possibly wrong (a danger acknowledged by Microsoft).

Encouraging More Use of Office Features
The best thing about the magic was the promise to liberate people from their lack of knowledge about the potential of applications. One of the speakers said that most people knew how to use 10% of PowerPoint’s features. The same is probably true of Word and Excel too, and it could be construed as a reflection on the complexity of the software rather than the inability of their human users. But the magic is that Copilot knows how to generate snazzy documents using features that I certainly don’t know how to use – or at least need to look up each time I attempt to use.

Encouraging more use of Office features could be considered value if it doesn’t hide the actual content among the bells and whistles conjured up by the Copilot AI. Clarity and conciseness are often attributes that better serve business communications.

The thing about automatically-generated content is that it can be wrong, so it was nice to see how Microsoft crafted in features to tell Copilot to redo something after the human (in charge) made a change or to do things like make text clearer. That was a nice touch.

No Technical Details Available Yet
From a technical perspective, there’s much that we don’t know about how the “sophisticated processing and orchestration engine” used by Copilot to link apps, the Graph, and GPT-4’s large language models. The Microsoft Technical Community post is full of aspirations and low on detail. On the upside, Jarod Spataro gave a brief insight into the technology when he said that the interaction between Microsoft 365 apps and the AI goes like this:

*Tell the AI what the user needs.
*Use the Graph to extract information from the user’s data to add context. I imagine that this involves Graph queries against repositories like SharePoint Online and OneDrive for Business to find documents, and Teams and Exchange Online to find messages. This process is called “grounding.”
*Pass the refined query to the AI/Large Language Model for processing.
*Post processing to make sure that the AI response is appropriate and meets security and compliance requirements.
*Respond to the app, which inserts the text and images.

There are many open questions that arise from this brief description. How is security enforced? Assumably this means that the information surfaced by the AI is trimmed similarly to the way Microsoft Search handles results to make sure that no one sees any information that they’re not allowed to. How is compliance handled or what does compliance mean when chatting with an AI bot? What auditing is performed so that organizations know who is using Copilot? Can use be restricted to certain users (perhaps by licensing, but maybe along to handle the requirements of unions or works councils who aren’t happy about AI usage). To be fair, Microsoft is still working out the administrative framework for Copilot.

Microsoft 365 Copilot Licensing and Cost
Other things that we don’t know about Copilot include licensing, availability in other languages than English, and implementation dates for different Microsoft 365 apps (online, desktop, and mobile). Microsoft says that they “will share more about pricing and details in the coming months.” Given the early stage of the software, it’s reasonable for Microsoft to not want to make a definitive statement at this point. We know from products like Loop (due to reach public preview on March 22) that it can take much longer than anticipated to bring software from concept to shipping product. My best guess is that we’ll see some Copilot features light up in Microsoft 365 apps later in 2023.

As to cost, Copilot looks like it is a premium feature instead of something that every Microsoft 365 subscriber will get. My hope is that Microsoft will include Copilot in products like Office 365 E5 and Microsoft 365 E5 instead of requiring customers to buy yet another add-on license. Of course, it would be nice if Microsoft made add-on licenses available for organizations that don’t have high-end licenses. However, recent examples like Teams Premium show that Microsoft like to carve AI-based features out into separate licenses, possibly to drive as much revenue as possible.

Source: https://practical365.com/microsoft-365-copilot-launches/
Khan Ehsanul Hoque

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