Latest news with #Researcher

Business Insider
30-04-2025
- Business
- Business Insider
Microsoft CFO hypes up AI agents in an internal memo about Q3 earnings
As Microsoft reported third-quarter earnings on Wednesday, chief financial officer Amy Hood's quarterly internal message to employees reflected on the company's 50th anniversary and touted recent AI agents as an example of what's to come. Hood sends the emails quarterly when Microsoft reports earnings, and they mostly rehash the public financial reports. "Celebrating our 50th anniversary earlier this month was a significant milestone, and I really enjoyed reminiscing about pivotal (or just funny) moments from those years with so many former and current employees — but what excites me most is still what's ahead," Hood wrote in a memo to staff, which was viewed by Business Insider. Hood hyped the company's recent release of two AI agents called Researcher and Analyst, built on OpenAI models and used in Microsoft 365 to analyze work data, as a "glimpse of what's ahead." "Each week the bar seems to be raised on what's possible," Hood wrote. "With that, new tools and capabilities are arriving fast, and I find myself asking almost daily if there is a better way to approach my work. These innovations are pushing each of us to think differently, work differently — and I hope they inspire all of us to lean in and try something new." Microsoft's stock rose 6% in after-hours trading after the company released a third-quarter financial report that beat analyst expectations.

Yahoo
26-03-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Microsoft adds AI-powered deep research tools to Copilot
Microsoft is introducing a "deep research" AI-powered tool in Microsoft 365 Copilot, its AI chatbot app. There's been a raft of deep research agents launched recently across chatbots, including OpenAI's ChatGPT, Google's Gemini, and xAI's Grok. Powering them are so-called reasoning AI models, which posses the ability to think through problems and fact-check themselves -- skills arguably important for conducting in-depth research on a subject. Microsoft's flavors are called Researcher and Analyst. Researcher combines OpenAI's deep research model -- which powers the company's own ChatGPT deep research tool -- with "advanced orchestration" and "deep search capabilities." Microsoft claims that Researcher can perform analyses including developing a go-to-market strategy and creating a quarterly report for a client. As for Analyst, it's built on OpenAI's o3-mini reasoning model and is "optimized to do advanced data analysis," Microsoft said. Analyst progresses through problems iteratively, taking steps to refine its "thinking" and provide a detailed answer to queries. Analyst can also run the programming language Python to tackle complex data queries, Microsoft added, and expose its "work" for inspection. What makes Microsoft's deep research tools slightly more unique than the competition is their access to work data as well as the worldwide web. For example, Researcher can tap third-party data connectors to draw on data from AI "agents," tools, and apps like Confluence, ServiceNow, and Salesforce. Granted, the real challenge is ensuring tools such as Researcher and Analyst don't hallucinate or otherwise make stuff up. Models including o3-mini and deep research are by no means perfect; from time to time, they mis-cite work, draw incorrect conclusions, and pull from dubious public websites to inform their reasoning. Microsoft is launching a new Frontier program through which Microsoft 365 Copilot customers can gain access to Researcher and Analyst. Those enrolled in Frontier, which going forward will gain experimental Copilot features first, will get Researcher and Analyst starting in April. This article originally appeared on TechCrunch at Sign in to access your portfolio