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Bronze and Stanway on target for England in World Cup qualifying
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'No pressure, no fun', says India's Suryakumar ahead of World Cup final
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Women rule the roost atop the Gdansk shipyard cranes
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'Fun day' for Olympic champion Braathen in giant slalom win
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Bayern's Neuer out of Atalanta tie with calf tear
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Arsenal survive FA Cup scare to keep quadruple dream alive
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Ohtani homers again as Japan edge South Korea at World Baseball Classic
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Japan hammer India 11-0 in Women's Asian Cup mismatch
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Trump threatens to escalate bombing as Iran vows no surrender
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Pirovano overtakes Vonn after 'crazy' World Cup downhill double
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Russian strikes kill 11 across Ukraine
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Nepal's rapper politician who took on the old guard and won
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Pirovano doubles up with second Val di Fassa downhill win
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Rapper-turned-politician Shah unseats former Nepal PM in own constituency
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Beating Italy is not a 'God-given right', says Wales coach Tandy
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Sri Lanka to treat Iranian sailors according to 'international law'
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New Zealand want to 'break a few hearts' in World Cup final
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Farrell welcomes bonus-point win over 'tough' Welsh
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Russian strikes kill nine across Ukraine, ravage apartment house
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Nepal's Balendra Shah holds unassailable poll lead for seat
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Hamilton says 'not where we wanted or expected' for Australian GP
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Pole-sitter Russell says his Mercedes more go-kart than 'bouncing bus'
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Google gives CEO new pay deal worth up to $692 million
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Thousands of Taiwan fans turn Tokyo blue at World Baseball Classic
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Verstappen baffled by crash in Australian Grand Prix qualifying
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Russell leads Mercedes 1-2 for Australian GP as Verstappen crashes
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Russia rains missiles and drones on Ukraine, killing six
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'Grateful' Osaka returns to action with Indian Wells win
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Israel fires 'broad-scale' strikes on Tehran as war hits 2nd week
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Tatum's 'emotional' return, Wemby magic sparks Spurs
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Judge homers as USA cruise past Brazil in World Baseball Classic
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Russian strike on Kharkiv appartment block kills three
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Grabbing the bull by the tail: Venezuela's cowboy sport
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Russell tops final practice in Melbourne as Antonelli crashes heavily
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Vibes war? Trump pitches Iran conflict on 'feeling'
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Nepal's rapper-turned-politician looks set for landslide win
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Tatum's 'emotional' return sparks Celtics over Mavs
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Rising US fuel prices risk sparking domestic wildfire for Trump
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Questions over AI capability as tech guides Iran strikes
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Israel announces new wave of 'broad-scale' strikes on Tehran
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Trump convenes Latin American leaders to curb crime, immigration
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Venezuela inflation hit 475% in 2025, the world's highest level
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Former 100m champion Kerley banned two years over whereabouts failures
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Sabalenka opens Indian Wells bid with dominant win
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Doris relieved Ireland's slim title hopes intact after 'scrappy' win over Welsh
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Man City aren't a 'complete team' admits Guardiola
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Arteta warns Arsenal to preserve reputation in Mansfield clash
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PSG beaten by Monaco before Chelsea Champions League showdown
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Timothee Chalamet taken to task over opera, ballet dig
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Ireland keep title hopes alive in thrilling win over Wales
Microsoft applies AI powers to Excel, Outlook
Microsoft pressed on with its AI revolution on Thursday, announcing that it would apply the powers behind ChatGPT to its iconic Excel, Word and Outlook programs.
The Redmond, Washington giant has been swiftly adopting language-based AI, showing less caution than its rivals despite early problems such as chatbots giving disturbing responses or blatantly inaccurate information.
Microsoft’s latest chatbot, called Copilot, will put ChatGPT-like abilities to work in offices, churning out meeting transcripts, calendar entries or PowerPoint slides almost instantaneously.
The thrust of the new release is that generative AI, the term for ChatGPT style capabilities, will function as an assistant for users of Microsoft's popular workplace software and not unilaterally take over office tasks.
"You could say we've been using AI on autopilot and with this next generation of AI, we are moving from autopilot to copilot," Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said at a virtual release event.
Microsoft is pouring billions of dollars into OpenAI, the company that is building the technology that powers ChatGPT and that released its latest version, GPT-4, on Tuesday.
That technology, which OpenAI says can be prompted by images as well as text, is already the foundation of a chatbot on Microsoft's Bing search engine that is gaining more users thanks to the embrace of AI.
Other tech giants are taking a more cautious approach to generative AI, afraid of the embarrassment that comes when the technology goes off the rails.
Google's cloud computing arm said this week that it will provide testers with ways to "infuse generative AI" into apps or put them to work on the internet titan's own platform.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said last month that the Facebook and Instagram parent company was creating a product group to come up with ways to "turbocharge" their AI work.
R.Adler--BTB