Microsoft Edge integrates Copilot, making the browser more than just a search bar
According to PandoraTech News, Microsoft recently announced on its official website that it has officially launched "Copilot mode" in its Edge browser, introducing a multi-layered AI intelligent agent architecture for the browser, allowing users' web interaction experience to evolve from "keyword search" to "intention execution."
In the past, browsers could only return search results based on keywords, but in Copilot mode, users only need to issue natural language commands, such as "Please help me find a three-bedroom, two-bathroom apartment in downtown Los Angeles with a rent of less than $5,000." The system will understand the intention, actively crawl, filter and integrate data from different sources, and present a comparative list of results.
Copilot also supports "label filtering" to further narrow the search scope and continuously adjust search criteria through conversational feedback. The natural language model behind it can understand cross-domain tasks and track context, demonstrating the ability to execute multi-step commands.
Microsoft says this reimagines the browser and represents a step toward closer interaction between generative AI and everyday humans. In the future, Edge will no longer simply be a gateway to the web, but a proactive digital assistant for users.
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