Artificial intelligence has mainly seized and replaced traditional search engines on the web. I have already seen it with an artificial intelligence overview of Google Search, following with Openai on the Searchgpt Road. Even alternative search engines such as Duckduckgo have begun to integrate artificial intelligence into their platforms, and things are not slowing down.
Well, we can now add another to the lint: Microsoft has just released a search for Copilot, which is somewhat similar to the Acts covered Bing. It takes data from sources throughout the web, then using Copilot forces of artificial intelligence to synthesize a summary of you. You may have seen something similar to Bing with “Copilot Answers” that works in Amnesty International.
COPILOT support natural language inquiries, which means that you do not worry about how to formulate your questions or search inquiries to get the answer you are looking for. For example, if you ask the question, “How much is 57 degrees Fahrenheit in Celsius?” , COPILOT research can know that you talk about temperature remittances.
Unlike Copilot answers in Bing, Search Copilot has its own interface that reminds us of Copilot itself (and ChatGPT, among the Chatbots of AI). You can ask follow -up questions and continue the conversation, and build on previous inquiries to get more specific answers.
The easiest way to try to search for Copilot now is to visit Bing.com/copilotsearch. Soon, the Amnesty International search engine will also be available via the lists in the Bing itself.
This article was originally appeared in our sister’s publication PC för alla It was translated and translated from Swedish.
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