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But have people actually been using Copilot since it launched?
He says he’s found uses for the AI assistant in both personal and professional workflows.

“I use Copilot pretty often, I probably use it at least once or twice a day.
However, if I’m working on a personal or professional project I use it for longer sessions.
I had eight separate sessions yesterday, but a few days ago I had eighteen sessions …

I find Copilot extremely helpful for discovery, troubleshooting, and learning how to install and do stuff.
That has really struck home with me.
Copilot streamlines my research process significantly, especially for more complex questions.

However, I’m rarely ever using its direct output in my work.”
Fact-checking it along the way is also an important step.
“I’ll use it more like a search engine and its text output more like a suggestion.

The page summaries feature integrates well with Edge and makes my life a lot easier.”
I was also interested in understanding what Liam’s workflow actually looks like when Copilot is assisting him.
Thus, he opts to use the Copilot website to snap it to the left of his screen.

“Copilot is not a good writer out of the box.
It can be impressive, but I really don’t recommend it.
There are some jobs that humans are always going to be better at than AI and vice versa.

Creativity and empathy are always going to human strengths, while data analysis and repetitive tasks are AI strengths.
Recently, Copilot has a terrible habit of repeating itself throughout conversations.
It slows down the process.”

So I started using it right away.
wasn’t possible until Copilot.
It made it accessible and powerful."

If you’re using this thing to tell stories, then there are legitimate reasons to depict violence.
So there needs to be a director or creator tier that just gives the user pure control."
Kenneth can’t see how that’s possible and condemns the use of AI in this way.

“I don’t understand how it could have been Microsoft image generator at all.
I do think Satire should be allowed, but not outright denegation.
It was bad, really bad.”

Kenneth doesn’t see it that way, however.
I get the human impact will be tumultuous, but every technological shift does this.
We reorder and reorientate ourselves.

It’s a bit of real conundrum, it seems heartless and a bit cruel …
I think we have to just embrace it than resist it, things aren’t going back.
AI is going to shift the balance of power significantly.

From the mundane to the profound.
Does Copilot Pro change the value proposition?
Extra image generation tokens: I don’t use them.

AI image generation is only useful to me to get ideas once in a blue moon.
I don’t have much other use for stolen art.
Kenneth believes AI tech will replace jobs and that this is a fact of life.

New industries and technology always come along, making older, outdated industries and technology irrelevant.
While not wrong, it is a particularly touchy subject right now in the creative sector.
Will AI really make creative roles redundant over time?

It’s clear that the next handful of years will be very interesting as AI becomes more ubiquitous.


