Expert maps out more than 80 different Microsoft Copilot products, but there may be more than 100 — 'What happens when you name everything Copilot,' an AI consultant mapped out the myriad products
An artificial intelligence aficionado has unearthed and charted 80 Copilot products that Microsoft has developed and marketed.
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An artificial intelligence (AI) aficionado has put together a chart featuring all the Copilot things that Microsoft has released since AI became the next big thing. At the latest count, Ty Bannerman notes that there are 80 different, separately marketed Copilot products and tools. Charting these Copilot things wasn’t a trivial task; even Microsoft doesn’t appear to maintain a definitive list. When I first noticed this story, there were 78 Copilots in Bannerman’s charts, but now it has expanded to 80.
The AI strategy, design, and implementation expert says that the idea of charting the expanse of the Copilot universe came to him when someone asked what Microsoft Copilot is. He knew it meant at least 75 different things, in so many contexts, at the time. “Apps, features, platforms, a keyboard key, an entire category of laptops - and a tool for building more Copilots,” tallied Bannerman in his blog. “All named ‘Copilot’.” His chart contends this is "What happens when you name everything Copilot."
Last week, the AI aficionado charted the number of Copilots as 78. However, since yesterday, I note the number has increased to a nice round 80. Thanks to the power of the internet / social media, Bannerman had learned of the existence of Gaming Copilot and Microsoft Dragon Copilot. The latter of those isn’t designed for residents of Westeros, but an AI clinical assistant.
Article continues belowCopilot says there are ~95 to 120+ Copilots
So, we have a chart of 80 Copilots, and who knows what the final figure may be, and how many more Bannerman can uncover?
Since I’m typing on a laptop with a Copilot key, I prodded it and asked the thing itself. Who better to ask? The answer was that “the ecosystem is well north of 100,” if you include things like every app-embedded Copilot, enterprise, and Azure-adjacent tools, etc. I then asked it to add them all up, and it concluded there were “~95 to 120+ Copilots.”
Is that too many? Well, even on this PC, I was surprised to find two Copilot apps in my system tray a few weeks ago. One pops up the usual chatbot box, the other was actually Copilot 365, which, when clicked, asked me to sign in with my (non-existent) Microsoft 365 credentials before I could use it. It has been eliminated.
The corporation's promise of major improvements to Windows 11 performance, reliability, and fewer Copilot interactions can't come soon enough.
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Mark Tyson is a news editor at Tom's Hardware. He enjoys covering the full breadth of PC tech; from business and semiconductor design to products approaching the edge of reason.
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jp7189 Holy name reuse batman.Reply
I got a chuckle when they launched their Claude Cowork competitor and named it Copilot Cowork. Like, seriously?! -
usertests Reply
Copilot+ Cow-Orkerjp7189 said:I got a chuckle when they launched their Claude Cowork competitor and named it Copilot Cowork. Like, seriously?! -
ekio This company became such a blob of garbage. Before I was disgusted by their low quality software, now i am legit angry at this company for abusing the normies with their <Mod Edit>. They force throat the most disgusting services and shady practices to an extent where i think a class action is justified.Reply -
blitzkrieg316 Reply
Everything they do requires 5+ email authentications. Try linking your Minecraft account so your kids can use it... Apparently it's possible but I have yet to successfully find the links all the AI and search engines say exist...Admin said:An AI aficionado has put together a chart of all the Copilot products they could find. At the latest count there are 80.
At least 80 different Microsoft Copilot products have been mapped out by expert, but there may be more than 100 — Microsoft doesn't have a singular... : Read more -
alrighty_then If you're old enough to remember Clippy, then CoPilot is what Clippy always *wanted* to be. Everything, everywhere, offering to help and watching what you do.Reply
Average user may benefit a lot as eventually Windows will be agentic to the point that much is accomplished by talking to it. For the average task it will do well - I expect - and many less-savvy computer users will think it's long overdue magic. Probably their first taste of AI too. -
ezst036 Reply
Linux would be the ultimate class action you are seeking.ekio said:This company became such a blob of garbage. Before I was disgusted by their low quality software, now i am legit angry at this company for abusing the normies with their <Mod Edit>. They force throat the most disgusting services and shady practices to an extent where i think a class action is justified.
We got a lot of lazy people to contend with though, they just want someone else to do their work for them instead of them getting up and doing it themselves.
The problem is, a mosquito is a mosquito. You can't lawsuit-it-out-of-biting you and drinking your blood. A tiger is a tiger. A scorpion is a scorpion. Microsoft is going to do what Microsoft does in just the same way any animal is going to do what that animal does.
You can't lawsuit-it-to-stop. You need to get away from the tiger before it bites you. It's a tiger. Tigers do what tigers do. Scorpions will sting you. These are just the simple facts of life. You can't lawsuit a scorpion to not stinging. Just get away. -
Sluggotg Reply
I absolutely hated Clippit, (I called it Clippy too). It was lame, useless and very annoying. Copilot is just another marketing tool by Microsoft used to separate us from our cash. I don't want or need Copilot. If it is so great, why isn't Microsoft selling it separately? Instead they shove it down our throats and want us to thank them for it.alrighty_then said:If you're old enough to remember Clippy, then CoPilot is what Clippy always *wanted* to be. Everything, everywhere, offering to help and watching what you do.
Average user may benefit a lot as eventually Windows will be agentic to the point that much is accomplished by talking to it. For the average task it will do well - I expect - and many less-savvy computer users will think it's long overdue magic. Probably their first taste of AI too.
I need to stop being lazy and start installing Linux on several of my machines.
P.S. Have you ever seen the old spoof video of a guy sitting at his computer doing work and a giant, (like 6ft tall), Clippy is saying, "It looks like you're writing a letter", over and over. The guy loses it and mangles Clippy. Certainly a funny video.