Microsoft introduces new autonomous AI agents

Microsoft introduces new autonomous AI agents

NEW YORK

Microsoft said it was enhancing its AI offerings with new autonomous agent capabilities as the tech titan aims to accelerate business adoption of artificial intelligence.

AI agents are specialized programs designed to perform routine tasks autonomously, such as sifting through sales leads or handling customer service inquiries.

The AI agent has become the newest buzzword for major software companies that are investing billions in powerful AI models, which they believe will shape the future of computing.

Microsoft has moved fast in pushing generative AI technology to everyday users, largely using the models from its $13 billion partnership with OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT.

Agents are intended to advance generative AI from ChatGPT-style chatbots, which require human prompts, to systems that can operate independently.

In a blog post, Microsoft introduced 10 autonomous agents for its Copilot AI platform, tailored to support sales, service, finance, and supply chain teams.

These agents will be available for public preview starting in December, with a full rollout planned through 2025.

The company envisions these agents facilitating a transition from today's traditional business routines to new work habits that are driven and increasingly carried out by AI.

Additionally, Microsoft announced the upcoming public preview of Copilot Studio, a tool enabling companies to create and manage their own AI agents.

Other tech giants are also exploring a deployment of AI agents, with venture capitalists poring money into startups offering their own take on the concept.

AI chip juggernaut Nvidia, Google and Oracle have also announced AI agent projects.