Copilot brings Microsoft and Google together

Ever found yourself juggling between Gmail, Outlook, and a dozen browser tabs just to find one email or check a meeting time?

It’s the kind of digital chaos most of us have learned to live with… until now.

Microsoft’s AI assistant, Copilot, is about to make life a lot easier. Thanks to a new Windows update, Copilot can now connect directly to your Gmail and Google Calendar, as well as your Microsoft accounts like Outlook and OneDrive.

That means, if you choose to turn it on, Copilot can search across both ecosystems to help you get things done faster.

Can’t remember when you last emailed a client? Just ask, “When did I last speak to Sarah?” Copilot will find it. Even if that message was buried in Gmail.

Need to plan next week’s schedule? It can check both your Outlook and Google calendars so you don’t double-book yourself.

Of course, you’re always in control. Copilot only accesses what you give it permission to. If you’d rather keep your accounts separate, that’s perfectly fine. It’ll keep working just as it always has within the Microsoft tools you already use.

But if you do choose to connect your Google account, it could be a real time saver. It’s one of the first times we’ve seen Microsoft’s technology work with Google’s instead of competing against it. If you mix and match apps from both sides, you’ll know that’s a big deal.

Away from searching and scheduling, Copilot is becoming a powerful creation tool. You can ask it to turn a few notes into a Word document, build a PowerPoint presentation, or even generate a polished PDF, all without opening a single extra app.

Longer responses from Copilot now include an “export” button so you can instantly send its output into the format you need.

The update has rolled out to Windows Insiders (Microsoft’s group of early testers) via the Microsoft Store, but it won’t stay there for long. This is clearly the direction Microsoft’s heading: Fewer apps, fewer steps, and more time to focus on actual work.

There is, however, one big question hanging over all of this. How much do you trust your AI assistant?

Linking Copilot to Gmail and your calendar means giving it access to some very personal data. Microsoft stresses that you stay in charge and your data isn’t used to train its AI, but it’s still worth thinking about before you click connect.

For many, the convenience outweighs the worry. It’s great to see we’re heading towards a world where your tools finally work together, not against each other.

Recent posts

Consider this before using AI browsers at work

Consider this before using AI browsers at work

Have you ever wondered what your browser is doing in the background while you work? Most people think of a browser as a simple window to the internet. But a new wave of AI browsers is changing that idea completely.  These tools are clever, fast, and can automate...

read more
PowerPoint drops its “Reuse Slides” feature

PowerPoint drops its “Reuse Slides” feature

Have you noticed that some changes don’t feel like improvements? Microsoft has announced that it’s retiring PowerPoint’s much loved Reuse Slides feature.  For anyone who builds presentations regularly, that’s a real blow. If you’ve never used it, Reuse Slides was...

read more
At last: Sync passkeys across your devices

At last: Sync passkeys across your devices

Be honest, when was the last time you forgot a password and ended up in that endless loop of “reset your password” emails? It’s one of the biggest frustrations of modern working life.  But it might finally be coming to an end. Microsoft has announced that...

read more