ChrisJohn86
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2024
- Messages
- 76
- Reaction score
- 1
Microsoft is continuing to integrate its Copilot AI into more of its portfolio, and now Edge users also have something to celebrate: the tech giant is currently trialing the Drafts with Copilot feature into the Edge Canary browser to make composing emails and posting on social media a breeze.
Exclusive to Microsoft 365 Copilot subscribers at launch, the add-in Drafts with Copilot attempts to save time in drafting in Outlook by prompting text, finishing sentences and rephrasing content for simplicity.
Drafts with Copilot, available previously only on the desktop version of Outlook, now bring drafting power to Edge users across Gmail, Twitter, and other communication platforms.
By pressing a single keyboard combination (Alt + I), this same person can invoke Copilot’s suggestions to fine-tune the draft, including adjusting the tone, format, and length of the text. Unlike its older Outlook sibling, in Edge, the user must decide whether to send the email instead of having it sent automatically.
While this is a limitation for most, the Edge version is easy to use, works with Outlook, Gmail, and Twitter, and doesn’t require a Microsoft 365 subscription.
Exclusive to Microsoft 365 Copilot subscribers at launch, the add-in Drafts with Copilot attempts to save time in drafting in Outlook by prompting text, finishing sentences and rephrasing content for simplicity.
Drafts with Copilot, available previously only on the desktop version of Outlook, now bring drafting power to Edge users across Gmail, Twitter, and other communication platforms.
By pressing a single keyboard combination (Alt + I), this same person can invoke Copilot’s suggestions to fine-tune the draft, including adjusting the tone, format, and length of the text. Unlike its older Outlook sibling, in Edge, the user must decide whether to send the email instead of having it sent automatically.
While this is a limitation for most, the Edge version is easy to use, works with Outlook, Gmail, and Twitter, and doesn’t require a Microsoft 365 subscription.