- Microsoft announces Copilot for Office apps.
- Copilot is a chatbot AI similar to Bing Chat but for work.
- The AI will come to Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and Teams.
Microsoft has announced the new Copilot feature that uses AI with ChatGPT (GPT-4) integration for its Office (Microsoft 365) apps, including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and Teams.
The Copilot is a chatbot similar to Bing Chat but designed for work. The feature appears on the right side of the Office apps to assist you in generating content for a document, email, presentation, and more.
The company has been testing the new chatbot with 20 organizations, and in the coming months, it’ll expand to more customers. Although Copilot is still under development, you may enable the feature on Excel , Word , and OneNote .
Copilot for Microsoft 365 apps
This is an overview of the capabilities the new Copilot brings to the suite of Office apps.
Word
In Microsoft Word, Copilot will allow you to request and generate content. For instance, you can ask to generate content on a specific topic or based on the content from another document.
If you want to refine the content, you will be able to ask the chatbot to do the writing, and of course, you will be able to edit and adapt the content to make it yours.
Although the word processing app already comes with grammar and spelling checking, the new Copilot will also be able to check for mistakes and make suggestions based on your preferences to improve the crafting of the document.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C8WDGKaOt2s
Excel
In Microsoft Excel, Copilot will help you to make more sense of the information by allowing you to analyze and explore the data in the spreadsheet.
Similar to how you use Bing Chat , you will be able to ask virtually anything using natural language. The chatbot is also smart enough to suggest formulas based on your queries, predict “what if” scenarios, and find data correlations. In addition, you will be able to instantly create a SWOT analysis or a PivotTable based on data.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-waFp6rLc0
PowerPoint
In Microsoft PowerPoint, the new chatbot will help you to create presentations based on a specific topic. It can convert a Word document into a presentation and a presentation into a Word document. Since the AI understands natural language, you can ask things like inserting animation into a slide or the entire presentation based on the context of your query.
Outlook
In Outlook, Copilot will be able to generate emails automatically based on your request or the contents of an existing email you are trying to respond. You will able able to adjust the tone of the message. And the Copilot will be able to summarize “lengthy, convoluted email threads with multiple people to understand not only what has been said, but the different viewpoints of each person and the open questions that have yet to be answered. “
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uI5mQjTp1fI
Teams
On Microsoft Teams, the chatbot will become your assistant that can generate a recap of the most important parts of the meeting. The Copilot in Teams will also be able to answer queries, suggest task delegation, and find the best schedule for the next meeting.
Business Chat
Microsoft is also introducing Business Chat, a new experience that connects to the Microsoft Graph to access all your data and apps (documents, presentations, email, calendar, notes, and contacts) to perform tasks that were impossible before.
The new Business Chat experience will be able to summarize information from meeting transcripts, recent contacts with customers, entries in your calendar, and more that you can then insert into presentations and emails.
The experience will be available from Microsoft365.com, Bing (as long as you’re signed in with a work account), and through Teams.
Business Chat is similar to the Bing Chat experience. It even includes similar footnotes to show the source of information, and users should even be able to update and correct entries.
How Copilot works
The company has also explained that it didn’t create Copilot by only plugging ChatGPT from OpenAI to Microsoft 365. The technology uses the “Copilot system,” which combines the Microsoft 365 apps with the Microsoft Graph data, plus the technology of ChatGPT version 4.
This is how Copilot works: if you query a question in Word, the chatbot will send the data to the Microsoft Graph to make sense of the context of the query, and then that data is sent to the ChatGPT language model. The answer is then sent to the Microsoft Graph for further grounding, security, and other checks before printing the answer to the users inside the app.
Microsoft also emphasizes that the new Copilot is not perfect and it’ll make mistakes. However, the company is touting the mistakes as something “usefully wrong” that will still give you a head start on the topic.
Microsoft Word makes it easy to create and print an envelope without the need for complex configurations or third-party software, and in this guide, you will learn how.
Although the mailing system does a pretty good job recognizing virtually any handwriting to deliver a letter, sometimes, you may still want to print the information onto the envelope for a more professional look or speed up the process when sending several pieces of mail.
Whatever the reason it might be, Word from Microsoft 365, Office 2021, 2019, 2016, and older versions include the “Mailings” feature to help you print envelopes and labels easily.
This guide will teach you the steps to print an envelope using Microsoft Word on Windows 11 .
Print envelopes from Microsoft Word
To print an envelope with Microsoft Word, use these steps:
- Open Microsoft Word app.
- Select the blank document option (if applicable).
- Click the Mailings tab.
- Click the Envelopes button.
- Under the “Delivery address” section, enter the delivery information, such as name and destination address, as you would with any envelope.
- Under the “Return address” section, enter your information, such as your name and address.
- Click the Options button.
- Select the envelope’s size (for example, Size 10 ) in the “Envelope size” setting.
- (Optional) Under the “Delivery address” section, change the font and position of the information.
- (Optional) Under the “Return address” section, change the font and position of the information. Quick tip: If you use Outlook and have the recipient’s information in your contacts, it is possible to click the address button to import the information.
- In the “Preview” section, confirm the envelope printout.
- Click the Printing Options tab.
- Under the “Feed method” section, select the printing feed location (face down and clockwise rotation) and the feeding tray. Quick note: The default selection should work for most cases, but make sure to confirm how to insert the envelope in the printer’s paper tray.
- Click the OK button.
- Click the Print button.
Once you complete the steps, the printer will print the envelope with the source and destination information you specified in Microsoft Word.
While you can print envelopes directly, Microsoft Word also includes the “Labels” tab in the settings that allows you to create and print labels, which you can then attach to an envelope.
If available, the settings also let you add electronic postage, but you need third-party software to use the feature.