During the festive season, Microsoft discreetly made its Copilot app available on Android and iOS, as well as on iPadOS platforms. The app provides users with the ability to interact with Copilot, previously recognized as Bing Chat, and functions in a similar way to OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

Copilot allows users to engage with a versatile AI chatbot. Just by typing a question or prompt, individuals can receive AI-generated answers.

Microsoft Introduces Copilot App With Gpt-4 And Dall·e 3

With the use of the AI assistant, tasks such as drafting emails, writing stories or scripts, summarizing complex documents, crafting personalized travel guides, updating job resumes, and more become seamless. Additionally, the app’s Image Creator, powered by DALL·E 3, offers a spectrum of creative possibilities.

Whether you’re looking to define new aesthetic styles, manage social media content, develop brand elements, conceive logos, create customized digital backgrounds, compile a portfolio, or storyboard for film and video, the Image Creator is a powerful tool. Image Credits go to Microsoft for this innovation.

Copilot stands out by “combining the power of GPT-4 with the imaginative capabilities of DALL·E 3,” according to the app’s description. It not only streamlines the design process but also pushes the boundaries of your creative expression to exciting new levels.

One of the most notable aspects of Copilot is its free access to OpenAI’s GPT-4 technology. This contrasts with OpenAI’s own GPT app, which operates on the older GPT-3.5 and charges users for the upgrade to GPT-4.

November marked a significant rebranding for Microsoft as Bing Chat was renamed Copilot. Before Copilot’s mobile inception, similar features were accessible via Bing’s chat functionality on its app. It remains to be seen whether Microsoft intends to phase out the Bing app in favor of Copilot, as they have yet to make any announcements on the matter.

Notably, the introduction of Copilot to mobile devices follows its previous availability on the web. Microsoft’s latest move aims to carve out a distinct identity for Copilot as a standalone offering and broaden its accessibility to a wider user base.