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Microsoft has made its Copilot app accessible to Android users

microsoft copilot

In a September update, Windows 11 bid farewell to Cortana, introducing its AI-powered assistant, Copilot. Fast forward to last month, Microsoft upped the ante by integrating OpenAI’s GPT-4 Turbo into Copilot, and now, Android users can harness its power.

Enter the Copilot AI-Powered Chat Assistant, recently launched on Android, boasting the prowess of OpenAI’s GPT-4 and DALL·E 3 models. This nifty app guarantees swift and precise responses while effortlessly transforming basic text inputs into visually stunning content.

For those eager to dive in, Copilot is up for grabs on the Google Play Store – a treasure trove for drafting emails, crafting stories, language translation, proofreading, and planning travel itineraries. DALL·E 3 powers the Image Creator, streamlining design processes by translating text prompts into high-quality visuals. While Android users revel in its accessibility, iOS enthusiasts are left in suspense, with Microsoft yet to confirm a release. Whispers suggest a potential 2024 launch, but the specifics remain shrouded in mystery.

This unveiling follows Microsoft’s rebranding of Bing Chat to Copilot. The Android version closely mirrors its ChatGPT counterpart, offering chatbot capabilities, image generation, and text drafting. As for iOS users yearning for a taste, current access to features is available through the Bing app. Microsoft's foray into the mobile app realm underscores Copilot's evolution into a versatile tool.

In a noteworthy collaboration, Suno, renowned for its AI music composition algorithms, has joined forces with Microsoft Copilot. The result? An intuitive tool that simplifies song creation. Users merely provide a text prompt, and the algorithm takes charge, churning out fully realized songs complete with lyrics and singing voices. Effortlessly crafting music has never been this accessible.

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