Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Copilot: how to use Microsoft’s own version of ChatGPT

ChatGPT isn’t the only AI chatbot in town. One direct competitor is Microsoft’s Copilot (formerly Bing Chat), and if you’ve never used it before, you should definitely give it a try. As part of a greater suite of Microsoft tools, Copilot can be integrated into your smartphone, tablet, and desktop experience, thanks to a Copilot sidebar in Microsoft Edge. 

Like any good AI chatbot, Copilot’s abilities are constantly evolving, so you can always expect something new from this generative learning professional. Today though, we’re giving a crash course on where to find Copilot, how to download it, and how you can use the amazing bot. 

Recommended Videos

How to get Microsoft Copilot

Microsoft Copilot comes to Bing and Edge.
Microsoft Copilot comes to Bing and Edge. Microsoft

Copilot is available to the public for free, but you’ll need to create a Microsoft account (which is also free) to access the tool. If you don’t have one already, simply head to account.microsoft.com. The free version of Copilot is also built into Windows 11. 

At the non-paid level, Copilot allows you to ask web-searchable questions, with the chatbot delivering thoughtful, information-filled responses with footnotes for future reference. For more advanced search results and integration with Microsoft 365 platforms like Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, you’ll need to purchase either Microsoft Copilot Pro for $20 per month. 

For Microsoft Teams compatibility, enterprise-grade data protection, and system customizations, you’ll need to sign up for the $30 per month Copilot for Microsoft 365 plan.

How to use Microsoft Copilot on your phone

Microsoft Edge browser showing Bing Chat on an iPhone.
Alan Truly / Digital Trends

Microsoft Copilot is easy to use on smartphones and tablets, and gaining access to the chatbot via mobile device is just as simple. In fact, all it takes is an app! The official Microsoft Copilot app is available for iOS and Android devices.

You can also access the Copilot chatbot through the Microsoft Edge and Bing apps (iOS and Android).

How does it work?

The three conversation styles available in Bing Chat.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Copilot works just like ChatGPT. You can ask it anything, and using an LLM (large language model), it will understand and respond in natural human language.

But Microsoft has also been slowly rolling out Copilot features, and most of them are available to use now. In particular, the Edge Copilot feature is particularly useful.

The chat tab focuses on more conversational language, which provides lots of suggestions on the types of questions you can ask. These include links to learn more, suggested follow-up questions, and functions much more like a traditional search engine.

In addition to chat, the sidebar also includes Compose and Insights. The Compose tab allows you to generate text in various tones and formats. You can choose between several different tones, formats, and lengths, which augments the types of output Copilot will provide. For example, you can generate a professional email and paste it into your email client, or you can generate a short blog post in a humorous tone. If you don’t like the response, you can quickly generate a new one as well.

Designer (formerly Bing Image Creator)

Screenshot of Microsoft Designer interface.
Microsoft

Another great part of the larger Copilot experience is Microsoft’ AI image generator. Known simply as Designer, this illustrative software allows you to create, edit, save, and share AI-generated images. You can access Microsoft Designer online, or through the Android app.

At the non-paid level, Microsoft Design gives you 15 image boosts per day, while the $20 per month Copilot Pro plan adds another 75 boosts to your Designer experience. For those unaware, a ‘boost’ is a type of digital currency for Designer that guarantees faster image generation. 

Is Microsoft Copilot the same as ChatGPT?

Microsoft describes the new Bing chat as “a new, next-generation OpenAI large language model” that’s more advanced than ChatGPT. Since the goal is to integrate this with Bing search, there are different considerations.

For example, Bing’s ChatGPT alternative is expected to be much faster than ChatGPT while stepping beyond the capabilities of GPT-3.5 in some ways. Known as the Prometheus model, Microsoft brings current news to its chat for up-to-date results that are still safe for Bing’s large user base. There was once speculation that Copilot, operating as Bing Chat, used GPT-4, and Microsoft confirmed that’s the case after OpenAI announced the launch of ChatGPT-4.

Microsoft had been testing the AI for over a year before it was released, and some Microsoft community posts point to the fact that Bing Chat showed this behavior well before it was released.

Other AI options

The Google Gemini main menu.
Google

One such AI tool is Google’s Gemini. When Gemini first launched, its performance was a little buggy, but has since shown across-the-board improvement.

A while ago, we reported on Jasper AI, an OpenAI partner that provides a ChatGPT-like solution, with no waitlist, that’s customized for business use.

Regardless of which company comes out on top, it’s clear that AI-powered search is the future. Hopefully, we’ll be able to see Google’s competitor in action soon.

Michael Bizzaco
Former AV Contributor
Michael Bizzaco has been selling, installing, and talking about TVs, soundbars, streaming devices, and all things smart home…
Microsoft considers developing AI models to better control Copilot features
The new Copilot 365 logo.

Microsoft may be on its way to developing AI models independent of its partnership with OpenAI. Over time, the generative AI company, OpenAI, has expanded its influence in the industry, meaning Microsoft has lost its exclusive standing with the brand. Several reports indicate Microsoft is looking to create its own “frontier AI models” so it doesn’t have to depend as much on third-party sources to power its services.

Microsoft and OpenAI have been in a notable partnership since 2021. However, January reports indicated the parties have had collaborative concerns over OpenAI's GPT-4, with Microsoft having said the model was too pricey and didn’t perform to consumer expectations. Meanwhile, OpenAI has been busy with several business ventures, having announced its $500 billion Stargate project, a collaborative effort with the U.S. government to construct AI data centers nationwide. The company also recently secured its latest investment round, led by SoftBank, raising $40 billion, and putting its current valuation at $300 billion, Windows Central noted.

Read more
OpenAI might start watermarking ChatGPT images — but only for free users
OpenAI press image

Everyone has been talking about ChatGPT's new image-generation feature lately, and it seems the excitement isn't over yet. As always, people have been poking around inside the company's apps and this time, they've found mentions of a watermark feature for generated images.

Spotted by X user Tibor Blaho, the line of code image_gen_watermark_for_free seems to suggest that the feature would only slap watermarks on images generated by free users -- giving them yet another incentive to upgrade to a paid subscription.

Read more
Google Gemini’s best AI tricks finally land on Microsoft Copilot
Copilot app for Mac

Microsoft’s Copilot had a rather splashy AI upgrade fest at the company’s recent event. Microsoft made a total of nine product announcements, which include the agentic trick called Actions, Memory, Vision, Pages, Shopping, and Copilot Search. 

A healthy few have already appeared on rival AI products such as Google’s Gemini and OpenAI’s ChatGPT, alongside much smaller players like Perplexity and browser-maker Opera. However, two products that have found some vocal fan-following with Gemini and ChatGPT have finally landed on the Copilot platform. 

Read more