Microsoft’s AI Copilot is getting a human-focused streamlining
The company is aiming to make the software easier to use for a growing number of workplace and personal tasks.
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Microsoft's new AI coding model could significantly enhance developer productivity, impacting enterprise software and cloud computing sectors. The post Microsoft to release new coding model next week appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Read full articleThe company is aiming to make the software easier to use for a growing number of workplace and personal tasks.
Microsoft Finance Agent helps finance teams use AI inside Microsoft 365 Copilot for reports, collections, audits, and data review.
Microsoft's new AI coding model could significantly enhance developer productivity, impacting enterprise software and cloud computing sectors. The post Microsoft to release new coding model next week, just in time for Build 2026 appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The partnership could accelerate AI integration in key sectors, enhancing productivity and transforming roles without reducing workforce size. The post EY and Microsoft partner to invest over $1B in AI adoption across enterprise sectors appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Centralizing software procurement enhances military efficiency and IT modernization, but execution risks could impact Dell's reputation and operations. The post Pentagon awards Microsoft $9.7B deal to consolidate software licenses across military branches appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Centralizing software procurement could streamline defense operations, reduce costs, and set a precedent for future government IT contracts. The post Pentagon awards Microsoft $9.7B deal to centralize software licenses appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Meta's potential cloud entry could reshape tech competition, leveraging AI investments to challenge established cloud giants and diversify revenue. The post Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg considers cloud computing entry amid AI spending spree appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
If ever there were a lawsuit in which a jury and judge should have ruled against both the accuser and the defendants, Elon Musk’s suit against OpenAI and Microsoft was it. The high-profile legal battle pitted the world’s richest man against a company worth more than $3 trillion, another that might soon launch a $1 trillion IPO, and tech execs claiming to have only the good of the world in mind, not mere filthy lucre, while they develop a technology some fear could eventually destroy humankind. The lawsuit was eventually thrown out, but only on technical grounds. Meanwhile, unregulated AI marches on, with Musk, OpenAI and Microsoft all getting richer. The only winner in this suit was hypocrisy. Here’s why. Back to the beginning To understand how this unfolded, we need to go back to OpenAI’s beginnings. The company was founded by current CEO Sam Altman, Musk and others in 2015 — back when AI was a niche technology, used primarily for image and speech recognition, robotics, and experimen