While Microsoft announced plans to end the dreaded "microslop" in Windows 11 by reducing where Copilot and its integrations appear across the operating system, it doesn't seem like the exact same principles will apply across its entire stack, especially Microsoft 365. This week, Microsoft announced that "Copilot Cowork" is now available via its Frontier program, making it an opt-in experience for Microsoft 365 users before it ships to broad availability. That said, I'd argue that Copilot Cowork is a clear attempt by Microsoft to deliver more value to its new 365 E7 AI subscription tier for $99
Where does Microsoft's non-exclusive agreement with OpenAI leave Copilot in Windows 11?
“You now have access in chat to multiple models by default, with intelligent auto routing in agents with critique and counsel," Nadella said, while explaining that Copilot is not dependent on one model. "You can use multiple models together to generate optimal responses.” While Copilot isn’t entirely reliant on OpenAI’s models, it closely resembles ChatGPT. Both are nearly at feature parity and share the same underlying technology for image generation and more. One of the major complaints at Microsoft's AI division by users is that Copilot isn't as good as ChatGPT. However, the company quickly