Skip to main content

Microsoft injects Cortana with AI so she can organize your meetings for you

microsfot speech recognition cortanaface
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Today’s digital assistants, whether Apple’s Siri, Google Now, or Microsoft’s Cortana, are constantly evolving to provide more ways to make our lives simpler and more manageable. And in some cases, new capabilities can be turned on at the server, giving us new functionality without needing to update our devices.

One of Cortana’s key strengths is how Microsoft continuously adds new integrations with other applications and operating systems. The company often creates specific projects aimed at extending Cortana’s capabilities, and the Microsoft Office blog has announced the latest one — artificial intelligence aimed at making scheduling meetings more efficient.

Recommended Videos

The project is code-named Calendar.help, and it’s a Microsoft incubation effort that applies AI technology — gained when the company acquired startup Genee in August 2016 — to Outlook calendars. The Microsoft Research team is heading up the project, which enables Cortana to work in the background to parse information in outgoing emails and then add them to your calendar with some intelligence.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

To check out Calendar.help, you first need to sign up for the preview waitlist. Once you’re accepted, you will be asked to provide permissions to the service to access your email and calendar. Cortana will then work in the background on any email where you add her to the cc: line, looking for references to meeting length, timing, and location.

cortana-calendar-help
Image used with permission by copyright holder

When she finds those sorts of references, Cortana will then propose times directly to attendees included in the email without bothering you with additional emails. When all attendees have confirmed a time, Cortana will then create an event in your calendar and issue invites to the attendees. Microsoft touts the conversational nature of the interactions, which makes it seem like an actual human assistant — and not a digital assistant — is doing the organizing.

cortana-calendar-help-2
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Today’s digital assistants are evolving into one of the primary ways that machine intelligence is being integrated directly into our personal and professionals lives. With projects like Calendar.help, Microsoft is extending Cortana beyond our own devices and into our interactions with other people.

Mark Coppock
Mark Coppock is a Freelance Writer at Digital Trends covering primarily laptop and other computing technologies. He has…
Elon Musk threatens to sue Microsoft over AI training
tesla and spacex ceo elon musk stylized image

Shortly after reports emerged on Wednesday that Microsoft is about to remove Twitter from its ad platform, Twitter CEO Elon Musk fired back with the threat of a lawsuit, claiming the computer giant illegally used Twitter’s data, such as users’ tweets, to train its artificial intelligence (AI) tools.

“They trained illegally using Twitter data,” Musk tweeted, adding: “Lawsuit time.”

Read more
Microsoft will launch ChatGPT 4 with AI videos next week
ChatGPT AI bot running a phone.

ChatGPT has been inescapable in recent months, and it looks like Microsoft is about to upgrade the AI tool with an update that could thrust it into the spotlight once again. That’s because the company is set to launch GPT-4 as early as next week, and it will potentially let you create AI-generated videos from simple text prompts.

The news was revealed by Andreas Braun, Chief Technology Officer at Microsoft Germany, at a recent event titled “AI in Focus -- Digital Kickoff” (via Heise). According to Braun, “We will introduce GPT-4 next week … we will have multimodal models that will offer completely different possibilities -- for example videos.”

Read more
Grammarly’s new ChatGPT-like AI generator can do a lot more than proofread your writing
GrammarlyGO's Rewrite for Length feature is shown.

Grammarly, one of the biggest names in writing tools, is adding AI-generated text to its repertoire on the heels of the wild popularity of ChatGPT. Known as GrammarlyGO, this new tool is focused on improving writing rather than replacing the writer.

GrammarlyGO will roll out in beta form to existing users in April. All tiers, including developers, business, education, and premium users, will have access. You can even use GrammarlyGO with a free account.

Read more