Microsoft pitches AI ‘agents’ that can perform tasks on their own at Ignite 2024
CHICAGO — Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella told customers at a conference in Chicago on Tuesday that the corporation is teaching a recent set of artificial intelligence tools how to “act on our behalf across our work and life.”
AI developers are increasingly pitching the next wave of generative AI chatbots as AI “agents” that can do more useful things on people’s behalf. But the expense of building and running AI tools is so high that more investors are questioning whether the technology’s commitment is overblown.
Microsoft said last month that it’s preparing for a globe where “every organization will have a constellation of agents — ranging from straightforward prompt-and-response to fully autonomous.”
Microsoft elaborated in a blog post Tuesday that such autonomous agents “can operate around the clock to review and approve customer returns or leave over shipping invoices to assist businesses avoid costly supply-chain errors.”
Microsoft’s annual Ignite conference caters to its large business customers. The pivot toward so-called “agentic AI” comes as some users are seeing limits to the large language models behind chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Google’s Gemini and Microsoft’s own Copilot. Those systems work by predicting the most plausible next word in a sentence and are excellent at sure writing-based work tasks.
But tech companies have been working to construct AI tools that are better at longer-range planning and reasoning so they can access the web or control computers and perform tasks on their own on a user’s behalf.
Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff has criticized Microsoft’s pivot. Salesforce also has its “Agentforce” service that uses AI in sales, marketing and other tasks.
“Microsoft rebranding Copilot as ‘agents’? That’s panic mode,” Benioff said in a social media post last month. He went on to claim that Microsoft’s flagship AI assistant, called Copilot, is “a flop” that is inaccurate and spills corporate data.
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