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GPT-5.5 Instant comes to Microsoft 365 Copilot

OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 Instant is now available in Microsoft 365 Copilot and Copilot Studio. GPT-5.5 Instant improves the quality of everyday work tasks and is designed to deliver more accurate and concise responses. It also features improved performance on image analysis and STEM-related tasks and reduces unnecessary follow-up questions.

Screenshot of Microsoft 365 Copilot chat interface with model options menu open on the right, set against a colorful gradient background.

The 4 patterns reshaping human‑agent collaboration

As the way we work changes amid the AI era, one industry is ahead of the curve. Software engineering is experiencing a broad shift: AI isn’t just boosting productivity, it’s reorganizing how work gets done. Four human‑agent patterns have emerged as capabilities grew and responsibilities shifted— writing, reviewing, delegating and orchestrating. Those patterns are now spreading across knowledge work in general. But as other industries shift, the key will be matching the work to the right patterns.

Yes, World Passkey Day is real

It’s World Passkey Day! Yes, that’s evidently a thing, and yes, we were just as surprised as you are. But it’s actually a chance to reflect on how we can reduce our reliance on passwords and other cyberattack-prone methods by adopting passkeys. Unlike traditional sign-on options, passkeys are device‑based cryptographic keys, so there’s no shared secret to steal or reuse — even in a breach. They’re built to be phishing‑resistant and tied to user’s devices, making common attacks like fake logins and credential theft largely ineffective. Now, Microsoft is expanding passkey adoption across the digital ecosystem.

Person using a laptop with a glowing, abstract digital overlay.

Global AI use rises, with gaps widening

Microsoft released its latest Global AI Diffusion Report today. The global adoption of artificial intelligence continued to rise in the first quarter of 2026. During the quarter, AI usage increased from 16.3% to 17.8% of the world’s working age population. At the top of Microsoft’s National AI Leaderboard, the UAE continued to lead global AI diffusion at 70.1%. The United States finally started to move up the national rankings, though only from 24th to 21st based on a 31.3% usage rate by the working age population. Dive into the full report to see how adoption varies by region and sector.

Abstract blue and purple waves with glowing particles and soft light effects.

How Porsche Cup Brasil uses AI to get cars back on track faster

A new Microsoft-powered workflow analyzes crash images in seconds to propose likely damaged parts — so teams can start repairs sooner. With telemetry streaming every three seconds into Microsoft Fabric, engineers can also spot abnormal behavior early and intervene while cars are still on track. That means faster damage assessment and smarter interventions, for the same goal: safer racing and a better experience for drivers, sponsors and fans.

Race cars lined up in a pit lane with crews and drivers preparing.

An easy way to prep for a meeting with the boss

You know that stressful moment before meeting with your manager — the one where you’re scrolling through emails, flipping through Teams threads and trying to remember just what on earth you’ve been working on this week? Now, Microsoft 365 Copilot can handle the scramble for you and get all your updates in order before your next one-on-one with this all-encompassing prompt.

shapes with a torn-paper label reading ‘The prompt.’

Microsoft brings Copilot Cowork to mobile devices

Copilot Cowork is now available across desktop and mobile devices. Microsoft announced today that workers can use Microsoft 365 on their computer, iOS or Android devices to describe the outcome they want and Copilot Cowork will create a plan, reason across their tools and files and carry the work forward. With the new mobile connections, Cowork can operate across business systems and data, even when users aren’t at their desk.

Microsoft 365 Copilot Cowork interface showing connected apps and plugins alongside a mobile screen with task options like organizing inbox and planning a week.

Microsoft teams up with US, UK governments on AI risks

Microsoft is partnering with government-backed groups in the U.S. and U.K. to test the company’s most advanced AI systems, check their safety measures and better understand potential risks to national security and public safety. The goal is to work with government experts to catch problems early — like cyberattacks or misuse — and build more trust in AI by making sure the systems work as intended and are as safe as possible.

Two people in discussion in front of a large digital world map display.

2026 Work Trend Index: Rethinking work in the age of AI agents

Every business leader knows the world is changing, but far fewer know what to do next. The real work now is to rethink how organizations operate around four human-agent collaboration patterns: author, editor, director and orchestrator. As that shift happens, people will spend less time on step-by-step tasks and more on setting direction, defining standards and evaluating outcomes. Learn more in the Microsoft 2026 Work Trend Index, a report on the state of AI at work.

Abstract network visualization with multicolored nodes connected by lines, surrounded by radiating red and blue rays forming a circular pattern.

New tools aim to secure an age of autonomous AI agents

Microsoft is introducing new security features for Microsoft Agent 365 and expanding Microsoft Defender’s integration with GitHub as AI systems grow more autonomous. The updates are meant to give organizations clearer oversight of what their AI agents are doing while adding real-time protections, linking code to live environments and helping teams spot and address risks more quickly.

Person seated at a desk using a desktop monitor, with a colorful heatmap overlay on the screen.

Email threats are evolving fast — here’s what stood out in early 2026

Email threats didn’t slow down in early 2026 — they got smarter. New Microsoft research shows attackers leaning heavily into link-based phishing, with QR codes more than doubling in just three months and fake CAPTCHA pages surging in the first quarter of the year. Taken together, the trends offer a clear picture of how email attacks are evolving — and what defenders should prioritize next.

People collaborating at a desktop computer, with a cybersecurity/education icon overlay.

How AI agents are changing the way software works

AI is already doing work inside the software companies rely on, quietly handling tasks in the background and changing what the software tools are built for. Instead of people navigating the software, the AI does the work. That means the focus now must shift to making sure systems are set up properly and that humans stay in charge of setting direction and judging the results.

Stylized home office with monitor on desk, forest and sun collage, and person holding a steaming cup.

Update brings more personalization to Xbox console and PC

Xbox is rolling out more options to customize the gaming experience. On the console, users can now pin more Groups to Home, customize colors and disable Quick Resume Settings on a per-game basis. There’s also a new play history tab, more resolution options and a network quality indictor. On PC, users can now manually add their favorite games to their Xbox library and reposition where notifications show up. Plus, the Gamepad cursor turns a player’s gamepad into a mouse, giving them a controller driven pointer to interact with apps that aren’t optimized for controller input.

Three Xbox consoles (white and black) with controllers floating against a starry, space-like background.

AI shifts from productivity to reinventing business

As organizations move toward becoming Frontier Firms, AI is shifting from being a productivity tool to a driver of creative reinvention. Microsoft’s approach centers on intelligence and trust: Microsoft IQ adds context and precision across data and workflows, while Agent 365 provides governance, security and observability across agents — supporting open, heterogeneous environments.

Microsoft logo above colorful abstract ribbon shapes on a white background.

Work smarter in 90 days: A real-world guide to using AI

You hear about it everywhere, from LinkedIn posts to keynote speakers to job listings: Learning to use AI is the way to get ahead in your job and help future-proof your career. But you may not know exactly where to begin. And even if you do, sometimes using AI tools can feel unsettling — the technology is evolving quickly, and it’s easy to wonder whether you’re doing it right. Now there’s a blueprint to help you become more AI-fluent and confident in your career path in this new world.

Illustration of two people studying from a large open book—one examining information with a magnifying glass, the other working on a laptop, with gears and documents around them.

Accenture rolls out Microsoft 365 Copilot companywide

AI isn’t meant to stay in pilots. Accenture is expanding Microsoft 365 Copilot to nearly its full global workforce of 743,000 across Accenture and Avanade, making it part of everyday work. Company data from the first 200,000 employees using Copilot in 2025 shows it helped speed up routine tasks by up to 15x and deliver a 53% improvement in productivity and efficiency.

Modern glass office building with the Accenture logo, trees outside, under a cloudy sky.

Azure Local now allows organizations to run larger workloads

Azure Local now scales to support deployments of up to thousands of servers within a single sovereign environment, allowing organizations to run much larger workloads locally across large-footprint datacenters, industrial environments and edge locations while maintaining control within their sovereign boundary.

Abstract pattern of small hexagons on a dark gray background, with a few blue and yellow highlights.

The hard part of AI: making it stick

AI’s promise is real. But the challenge to realizing its value isn’t technology — it’s people. AI scientist, entrepreneur, and investor Rana el Kaliouby joins podcast host Molly Wood to explain why adoption breaks down when AI doesn’t fit how people actually work and how to close the gap between experimenting and making AI actually useful.

“It’s not just about like getting the work done,” el Kaliouby says. “It’s actually how do you … dissect an everyday workflow and inject AI in it in a way that’s sustainable, that’s repeatable, that’s trustworthy?” She says it’s easy to try tools, but much harder to build them into your day‑to‑day in a way that people trust and keep using.

Portrait of a person with shoulder-length hair on a purple background with abstract rounded shapes.

A new map charts the world’s farms, field by field

For the first time, researchers have mapped agricultural field boundaries across the entire planet — creating a new foundation for tracking food systems, water use and agricultural change. The map is powered by AI models that have been trained to identify field boundaries from satellite imagery and built through a global collaboration between Microsoft, Taylor Geospatial and other partners. Explore the interactive map to see how the world’s fields take shape in unprecedented detail.

World map showing agricultural field locations highlighted in pink and green.

Study finds AI can get lost in multi-turn conversations

Large language models (LLMs) are designed to have conversations. That means they can help not just when a task is clearly laid out, but also when users are still figuring out what they need by talking it over. Now, new research shows that LLMs often do worse when a task is spread across multiple turns instead of just being given all at once. Across many tests, performance dropped sharply — about 39% — mainly because models became more unreliable with subsequent iterations. Researchers found the models tend to guess early, jump to answers too soon and then stick with those wrong assumptions instead of adjusting as new information comes in. It’s definitely something to keep in mind when assigning a task to an LLM.

Abstract illustration of layered frames with a human profile and a laptop, each paired with a speech bubble on a green background.

Microsoft to invest A$25 billion in Australia by 2029

Microsoft is investing down under. Microsoft Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Satya Nadella, alongside Australia Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, announced the company’s largest-ever investment in the country. By the end of 2029, Microsoft will invest A$25 billion (USD $18 billion) in new digital infrastructure, alongside new commitments to national cyber defense capability and workforce training programs.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella stand together, smiling, in front of a scenic Australian view.

Microsoft expands AI literacy push to skilled trades workers

In a world that can feel increasingly virtual, there are millions of skilled trade professionals who remind us of a simple truth: the critical infrastructure of the AI era still depends on uniquely human skills and what we can create, build, wire, weld, install and maintain. Now, Microsoft is expanding its partnership with North America’s Building Trades Unions (NABTU) to support a strong, skilled workforce pipeline and help workers across North America build the skills needed to succeed in an AI-powered economy.

AI won’t replace experience, judgement and craft that define the trades. Instead, it’ll amplify those human skills, helping people work more safely, learn quickly and deliver higher-quality outcomes on increasingly complex job sites.

Three industrial workers in hard hats and safety vests using tablets inside a facility, shown in a three-panel collage.

Cricket Australia uses AI Insights to bring fans closer to the action

Cricket Australia, the governing body of the sport, updated its Cricket Live Australia app with AI Insights, taking advantage of Microsoft AI tools to engage fans and help propel the sport forward. Using historical data that spans thousands of matches, the app allows users to gain deeper insights about the game, whether they are a novice or an expert.

Group of six people in a casual lounge cheering and clapping around a table with drinks and snacks.

Double Fine turns pottery into a team brawler with Kiln

At Double Fine Productions, an idea that emerged almost a decade ago during an internal game jam became Kiln, a pottery party brawler. (Say that fast five times!)

To better understand the craft behind the concept, members of the team got hands-on experience with in-person classes. They learned techniques and gained an appreciation for the complexity of working with clay before translating those lessons into a game infused with cathartic creation and destruction.

The result blends hands‑on creativity with social play, shaped by a studio culture that encourages experimentation, kindness, collaboration and respect.

Colorful animated pots with faces dancing near a glowing kiln under the “KILN” title.

A device with no local data, built for the Cloud PC era

Think of Windows 365 Link as a stripped-down device that doesn’t do much on its own — instead, it instantly connects you to a full Windows experience that lives in the cloud. After a year, companies are adopting it to cut down on IT headaches, since there’s no data stored on the device and it’s easier to manage, secure and set up. Microsoft is now expanding where it’s available and adding features, pitching it as a simpler replacement for traditional desktops, especially in shared or frontline work settings.

Microsoft's Windows 365 Link device on a wooden desk beside a keyboard, mouse and monitor.

When do you work best?

We’ve all looked at the clock and wondered “how is it already 4 p.m.?!” at least a few times. Maybe your workday feels like a mysterious blend of brilliance and busyness? Now you can use AI to help decode how you’re spending your time.

shapes with a torn-paper label reading ‘The prompt.’

Industry turns to AI to keep pace with cyber threats

Remember Y2K? Cybersecurity is entering a similar scramble — this time driven by AI. The latest AI models can now find software bugs at an unprecedented rate, making it easier for hackers to exploit them. Organizations must rethink their digital exposure and response times. But those same lurches forward in AI technology also give defenders an edge: They can find vulnerabilities sooner and reduce the time it takes to fix them. Microsoft is working with industry partners to identify risks earlier and turn those findings into real protection for people and systems everywhere.

Person presenting a global map on large screens while another person works on a laptop in a split-screen graphic.

Microsoft nears zero plastic in packaging

Microsoft’s gotten single‑use plastic in its packaging down to 0.07%. You see it right away opening a Surface box — no shrink wrap, no plastic shell, just a clean paperboard setup. But that didn’t happen overnight. It took years of rethinking how things are made and shipped, all tied to a bigger push to cut waste and ditch plastic altogether.

Orange Microsoft Surface laptop box with blossoms bursting and floating in the air.

AI at scale requires control, not just capability

The real challenge in AI right now isn’t capability — it’s control. As companies deploy more autonomous agents to handle real business processes, businesses must build governance, monitoring and security layers. To scale this, they need two things: first, intelligence grounded in their own data, and second, trust — with security, governance and monitoring — so AI can deliver results. As AI becomes part of everyday work, success will come down to how well it’s integrated and managed.

Digital globe at night with glowing network lines, titled ‘State of the Partner Ecosystem 2026.
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