If you are a co -pilot user, you now have more artificial intelligence tools at hand: Microsoft gives unlimited free access to Voice and think more deeply on its free level. The voice allows you to have a conversation with the AI tool using verbal commands, while deeper Think allows more complex questions than the ordinary co -pilot, because it has more advanced reasoning powered by the O1 model of Openai.
Copilot, launched in 2022, is Microsoft’s entry into the increasingly competitive world of AI chatbots like the Openai Chatppt and Google Gemini. While technological companies compete and the new Chinese participants Deepseek for one foot, they continue to publish new features and tools supplied by AI – and now provide more for free after Deepseek has launched a completely free service. These voices and think the deeper features are variations in the interface, which gives users different ways to engage with Microsoft AI offers.
The senior editor -in -chief of CNET and IT expert Lori Grunin tested, think further Tuesday, confirming that although it is free, “at one point, he has stopped providing new responses to refined requests and a popup D ‘Co -pilot experience “, I tried to allow myself to sign in.”
Grunin added that he had also not obeyed specific parameters during his test.
I gave voice to change how it sounded in the parameters) and asking myself my name.
His follow-up question, after having badly pronounced my name, was always the generic: “What do you think?” I asked him for the weather in my city, and it gave me up-to-date information as well as a recommendation to come out “in a while” in hot and sunny and warm weather.
But he then told me that I didn’t have 2 minutes left from the voice. You must therefore really create an account and connect to have this unlimited access announced today. (When I closed the vocal chat, Copilot gave me a transcription of our call.)
You can become a Free co -pilot user -Simply register using a Microsoft email address. The free version limits the features to which you have access, slows down your answers after 15 “boosts” per day and does not give you access to the latest models during non -peaks. There is a paid level called Copilot Pro ($ 20 / month) and a business version that starts at $ 30 per user and per month.
Some of Microsoft’s suggestions include the use of voice to practice a new language, ask it to help you practice a job interview or ask it out loud for cooking tips or recipe steps while Your hands are busy in the kitchen – a bit like a vocal assistant.
To think more deeply, Microsoft says that some of the most complex problems you can help are to compare electric vehicles, ask him for home renovation advice and check the advantages and disadvantages of buying A generator for breakdowns.
As with all AI tools, you should be wary of what you advise you to do, and CNET recommends checking everything it comes back – whether it is steam tips that can give you thanks to a hallucination, or to propose a savings plan that has no financial sense.
You should also not tell an AI chatbot to any of your personal information, including financial information, lest a data violation of leaking it to criminals.
That said, our CNET review revealed that Copilot was one of AI’s best tools, which gives him a 7/10 because it generally provides precise and relevant information. The main writer Imad Khan recommends the Claude d’Anthropic as the best IA chatbot, however, saying that he “does a coherent job and goes further than what comes out of Google, Microsoft, Perplexity and Openai at the level free”.
Look at this: What is Deepseek Ai? Everything that needs to know about the new popular AI