Thousands of people swooned in a dark conference hall that felt more like a rock concert when a Microsoft product manager demonstrated the companyâs latest feature: how to sum numbers in Excel, with the click of a button.
âIt was literally like Mick Jagger walked out,â said Yusuf Mehdi, Microsoftâs consumer chief marketing officer, who started as an intern.
That was more than 30 years ago. On Friday, the day Microsoft turned 50, the companyâs leaders and staff gathered at its headquarters in Redmond, Washington, to remember the software makerâs glory days while trumpeting what they hope will bring it into the future: more powerful artificial intelligence.
Copilot, Microsoftâs AI assistant, is gaining a host of new features to make it more proactive. The version for consumers will start remembering personal facts about them. It will offer birthday reminders or support ahead of a presentation, or consumers can opt out, Mehdi said in an interview.
Copilot likewise will personalise podcasts and shopping recommendations, and it will let consumers task their AI to make reservations for them.
âIt frees you up,â said Mehdi.
Microsoft is hardly first to roll out action-taking or âagenticâ software. As with rival systems, the AI will work best on popular sites where Microsoft has done some behind-the-scenes technical work, like with 1-800-Flowers.com and OpenTable, Mehdi said.
Mehdi recalled days when Microsoft was smaller and growing. He said CEO Bill Gates could devour three booksâ worth of information from one day to the next, at a time when the co-founder still worked on Microsoft software.
Mehdi watched Steve Ballmer, Gatesâ eventual successor, chant âdevelopers, developers, developers!â in a sweat-drenched shirt to rouse a crowd into the â.netâ era.
Microsoft went from top of the pack to badly bruised in a high-profile lawsuit that US antitrust enforcers brought against it in 1998. Years later, younger companies and startups, among them Alphabet and ChatGPT maker OpenAI, beat it to the punch on key AI developments.
Satya Nadella, Microsoftâs current CEO, is not standing still. The leader who turned Microsoft into the No. 2 cloud powerhouse challenged his executives at an internal summit this week, recalled Mehdi: âHow do we rethink the way that we build the software?â
Nadella voiced a similar view at Microsoftâs Redmond event on Friday, where he, Gates and Ballmer made a rare joint public appearance. Ballmer reprised his âdevelopers!â chant as well.
Nadella said the company was not simply celebrating its past 50 years but creating a future defined by âwhat we empower others to build.â
Gates said, âWeâre on the verge of something even more profound than what came for those first 50 years.â Asked what he wished for Microsoft at age 100, he said: âI hope Copilotâs a good CEO.â
Microsoft is iterating on its chatbot technology in a crowded field that includes Elon Muskâs xAI and Anthropic. It has added Copilot to its heavily used productivity suites for business while giving consumers a distinctive version.
âItâs warm; it has that personality,â said Mehdi. Some users have taken to this, while others find it asks too many questions, he added.
âWhen we get to now be more personalised, we can start to get smarter.
âWeâre part way through that journey.â
Â
(Australian Associated Press)
Â