Microsoft
is
unveiling
new
features
in
its
$30
per
user
Microsoft
365
Copilot
monthly
subscriptions
that
are
designed
to
improve
AI
integration
inside
of
Office
apps.
Excel
is
getting
Python
integration
inside
of
Copilot,
PowerPoint
has
an
improved
AI-powered
narrative
builder,
Word
is
getting
better
at
AI-assisted
drafts,
and
Copilot
will
be
able
to
help
you
organize
your
Outlook
inbox,
too.
After
bringing
Python
to
Excel
last
year,
Microsoft
is
now
combining
its
Python
support
with
Copilot
to
let
Excel
users
easily
perform
advanced
analysis
on
spreadsheet
data.
“Now,
anyone
can
work
with
Copilot
to
conduct
advanced
analysis
like
forecasting,
risk
analysis,
machine
learning,
and
visualizing
complex
data
—
all
using
natural
language,
no
coding
required,”
says
Jared
Spataro,
corporate
vice
president
of
AI
at
work
at
Microsoft.
“It’s
like
adding
a
skilled
data
analyst
to
the
team.”
The
Copilot
and
Python
integration
inside
of
Excel
enters
public
preview
today,
just
as
Microsoft
makes
Copilot
in
Excel
generally
available
to
its
Microsoft
365
Copilot
subscribers.
Microsoft
has
also
added
Copilot
support
for
XLOOKUP
and
SUMIF,
conditional
formatting,
and
the
ability
for
the
AI
assistant
to
produce
more
charts
and
PivotTables.
Copilot
in
PowerPoint
is
also
getting
improvements,
with
an
improved
narrative
builder
that’s
designed
to
let
you
quickly
create
a
first
draft
of
a
slide
deck.
The
AI
assistant
will
even
soon
use
a
company’s
branded
template
to
create
drafts
or
company-approved
images
from
SharePoint
libraries.
Copilot
in
Microsoft
Teams
will
summarize
conversations
that
happened
in
the
text
chat
as
well
as
spoken
ones
in
meetings
later
this
month.
This
will
help
meeting
organizers
make
sure
they
didn’t
miss
any
unanswered
questions
that
were
typed
into
the
chat.
“Our
customers
tell
us
Copilot
in
Teams
has
changed
meetings
forever
—
in
fact,
it’s
the
number
one
place
they’re
seeing
value,”
says
Spataro.
Copilot
is
getting
more
useful
inside
of
Outlook
inboxes.Image:
Microsoft
I’ve
personally
been
waiting
for
improvements
to
Copilot
in
Outlook
beyond
drafting
and
summaries,
and
now
Microsoft
is
starting
to
allow
its
AI
assistant
to
organize
your
inbox.
A
new
“prioritize
my
inbox”
feature
lets
Copilot
automatically
prioritize
emails.
Later
this
year,
you’ll
also
be
able
to
“teach
Copilot
the
specific
topics,
keywords,
or
people
that
are
important
to
you,”
according
to
Spataro.
These
emails
will
then
also
be
marked
as
high
priority
in
your
inbox.
Later
this
month,
Microsoft
is
also
improving
Copilot
in
Word
to
let
you
reference
data
from
emails
and
meetings,
alongside
data
from
documents.
This
will
make
it
easier
to
bring
in
attachments
from
emails
or
entire
talking
points
from
meetings.
Microsoft
is
also
rolling
out
Copilot
in
OneDrive
later
this
month,
making
it
easy
to
summarize
and
compare
up
to
five
files
to
spot
differences
between
them.
OneDrive’s
file
comparison
tool.Image:
Microsoft
Microsoft’s
improvements
to
Copilot
in
Office
are
designed
to
make
the
AI
assistant
more
enticing
to
businesses,
alongside
a
new
Copilot
Pages
feature
and
AI
agents
that
will
automate
certain
tasks.
Recent
reports
have
suggested
there
has
been
a
lukewarm
reception
to
Microsoft’s
paid
Copilot
version
for
businesses,
due
to
bugs
and
a
reluctance
to
pay
the
$30
per
user
price.
Microsoft
says
60
percent
of
the
Fortune
500
now
use
Copilot
and
that
the
number
of
people
who
use
Copilot
daily
at
work
“nearly
doubled
quarter-over-quarter.”
Both
of
these
data
points
appear
to
include
the
free
version
of
Copilot.
Microsoft
has
won
over
a
big
customer
for
Microsoft
365
Copilot:
Vodafone
is
signing
up
for
68,000
Microsoft
365
Copilot
licenses
for
its
100,000
employees,
after
trialing
the
AI
assistant
and
seeing
early
benefits.
Original author: Tom Warren
Comments