https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4YITgPzkVA

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How to Use Microsoft Copilot - Complete Beginner's Guide

Microsoft Copilot is an AI-powered chatbot that is free to use. It can write content like blog posts or emails, summarize large amounts of text, create images, search the web, and more.

The best way to access Copilot is through the Copilot website. Signing in allows longer conversations. Choose one of three modes depending on your needs: balanced, creative, or precise.

Copilot answers questions in two ways: from its own knowledge base, and by searching the internet to assemble a conversational response. It provides ideas and follow-up questions to continue the conversation.

Copilot can also turn text into images or analyze uploaded images. The Microsoft Designer tool allows editing the generated images.

There is a paid Copilot Pro version which provides Copilot inside Microsoft apps like Word, Excel, and Outlook. The AI behind Copilot is ChatGPT.

To get better responses, learn prompt engineering - how to properly communicate with AI chatbots. The Skill Leap AI platform provides courses on prompt engineering, ChatGPT, Copilot, and other AI tools.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_nf56aMPdZE

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Microsoft Copilot Full Review | AI in Word, PowerPoint, Excel and More!

The narrator reviews Microsoft Copilot, an AI assistant integrated into Microsoft products. It was announced in February 2023 but just released to the public. It costs $20/month.

Copilot is currently available in Teams, Outlook, Word, PowerPoint, Excel, OneNote, Loop, and Whiteboard.

The narrator demonstrates Copilot's capabilities in Word, PowerPoint, and Excel. In Word, it can generate text summarizing differences between products. In PowerPoint, it can create basic slide decks on a topic. In Excel, it can filter, highlight, sort, analyze data, and generate formulas.

The narrator finds Copilot can perform simple tasks well, like filtering, pivots, graphs, and formulas. But it struggles with more complex requests, doesn't work well with large datasets, requires an internet connection, and is slower than doing tasks manually.

Overall the narrator gives Copilot a 7 out of 10 rating but sees strong potential as the product matures over time.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AbMkXSvdEXo

ChatGPT-4o vs Microsoft Copilot - Which is the best AI Tool in 2024?| 5 Round Battle

The narrator conducts a 5 round test to compare ChatGPT and Microsoft Copilot. The criteria are quality and speed of response.

In round 1 (ChatGPT wins), they respond to a customer service query. ChatGPT is faster and provides more detailed troubleshooting.

In round 2 (Copilot wins), they recommend business podcasts. Copilot references sources and is more tailored, though slower.

In round 3 (ChatGPT wins), they advise on a social media campaign. ChatGPT is faster and more directly helpful.

In round 4 (ChatGPT wins), they summarize a PDF. ChatGPT is faster and structures the summary better.

In the final round (photos), Copilot wins by providing 4 detailed options.

The final score is ChatGPT 3, Copilot 2.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AesbRF_Hys4

Getting started with Copilot for Security

Microsoft announced Copilot for Security, an AI assistant for security tasks. The narrator shows how to deploy Copilot in an Azure tenant. A Copilot capacity must be created, costing $4 per hour. Once set up, Copilot can summarize threat intelligence, analyze scripts to determine if they are malicious, answer security questions, and more.

The narrator gives Copilot a web shell script found during the Hafnium Exchange attack. Copilot analyzes the script, determines it is malicious, and explains what it does. It provides a detailed security assessment.

When finished testing, the narrator deletes the Copilot capacity so as not to incur monthly charges. Data is retained for 90 days before being deleted. The narrator promises more videos on using Copilot for Security.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gs1oUGpSATg

Getting started with Copilot Studio and connect with Microsoft Teams

The narrator demonstrates how to create a custom virtual assistant called a "copilot" using Microsoft Copilot Studio. The copilot can answer questions by scraping data from websites the user provides.

The narrator builds a sports copilot using the FIFA, IPL, and ESPN Cricinfo websites. He also uploads a Word document with custom answers.

After building the copilot, the narrator connects it to Microsoft Teams so users can chat with it there. He asks the copilot sports questions like "How many centuries has Virat Kohli scored in IPL?" and it provides answers from the sites.

The narrator explains copilots can understand natural language questions and scrape websites to answer without any coding. He says he will cover more advanced copilot capabilities in future videos.