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        AI Agents at Forefront of Microsoft's Copilot Vision
        
        
        
        
AI agents are  coming for your workflows.
That's a key  takeaway from Microsoft's recent event spotlighting new and forthcoming  capabilities in Microsoft 365 Copilot, its productivity-minded AI assistant. 
Among the  product's so-called "Wave 2" updates is the capability, now generally  available, to create autonomous AI agents and embed them into Microsoft 365  workflows.
Microsoft  previously described the agent capability at this May's Build  conference. Microsoft envisions AI agents as smaller copilots that are  capable of running autonomously to perform complex tasks with layers of  dependencies. 
As Microsoft  described in a blog  post Monday, agents play a central role in the company's AI vision. "We  think everyone will need to be able to create agents in the future, much like  how everyone can create spreadsheets or presentations in Microsoft 365,"  wrote Charles Lamanna, Microsoft's Copilot chief. 
"We  believe organizations that embrace Al will create and use many Copilot agents,"  he added. "There will be as many agents as there are documents or  SharePoint sites in an organization." 
The new Copilot  Agents capability announced Monday lets users build agents using Copilot  Studio, ground them in organizational data like SharePoint or Dynamics 365,  teach them skills such as creating support tickets or responding to e-mails, then  deploy them across Microsoft 365, including within Microsoft Teams. 
The agents are  fully managed and orchestrated by Copilot. Per Microsoft Corporate Vice  President Jared Spataro during the presentation, the agents "can reason,  remember, be trained and even know when to ask for help."
A separate  Copilot Agents in SharePoint feature, rolling out as a public preview in October,  will allow users to quickly create agents connected to specific SharePoint  sites or folders.
Microsoft  announced a slew of other enhancements coming to Microsoft 365 Copilot. More  details are in this Redmond Magazine article.