Microsoft
Microsoft Debuts Two New Homegrown AI Models 🤖✨
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Microsoft is broadening its artificial intelligence capabilities 📈 with the release of two models developed entirely within its own labs 🧪. The first, MAI-Voice-1, marks the tech giant’s debut in natural speech generation 🗣️, while MAI-1-preview stands as its inaugural end-to-end text-based foundation model 📝. You can already hear MAI-Voice-1 in features like Copilot Daily and Podcasts 🎙️. Meanwhile, Microsoft has opened MAI-1-preview for public testing on LMArena ⚖️ and plans to integrate previews into specific Copilot scenarios in the weeks ahead 📅.
Speaking with Semafor, Mustafa Suleyman, the head of Microsoft’s AI division 👔, emphasized that efficiency and cost-effectiveness drove the development of this pair ⚡. The difference in scale is notable: MAI-Voice-1 operates on a single GPU 💻, and the training for MAI-1-preview required roughly 15,000 NVIDIA H100 GPUs ⚙️. For perspective, competitors like xAI’s Grok utilized over 100,000 of those same chips 🚀. “Increasingly, the art and craft of training models 🎨 is selecting the perfect data 🗂️ and not wasting any of your flops on unnecessary tokens that didn’t actually teach your model very much,” Suleyman noted.
While Microsoft Copilot serves as a testing ground for these internal projects 🤖, the platform remains largely powered by OpenAI’s GPT technology. However, the move to cultivate proprietary models—despite having poured billions of dollars into its partner 💸—signals Microsoft’s ambition to stand as an independent contender in the field 🦅. Reaching parity with established forerunners may take time, but Suleyman told Semafor that the company is committed to “an enormous five-year roadmap 🗺️ that we’re investing in quarter after quarter.” Given the murmurs of a potential AI bubble 🫧, Microsoft will need to execute that timeline aggressively to prove this independent path is worth the effort 🛤️.
Microsoft
Microsoft 🎮 has unveiled its latest slate of titles arriving on Xbox Game Pass this November 📅.
Microsoft 🎮 has unveiled its latest slate of titles arriving on Xbox Game Pass this November 📅. Subscribers have plenty to anticipate, headlined by the arrival of Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 🔫 on day one of its release 🚀.
The schedule kicks off on November 5 with Dead Static Drive 🚗. This indie survival-horror adventure sends players on a nostalgic, 1980s-style road trip across the country 📻🧟. Launching alongside it is Sniper Elite: Resistance 🎯, a tactical third-person shooter known for its deep sniper mechanics, which also features a co-op campaign perfect for playing with friends 🤝.
The following day introduces what might be the month’s hidden gem—and no, it isn’t Call of Duty 💎. It is Egging On 🥚, a unique platformer where you navigate the world as a fragile egg attempting to escape the hen house 🐔. Players must survive harrowing obstacles and dizzying heights with nothing but a delicate shell for protection 🧗♂️. Also arriving that day is Whiskerwood 🐭, a strategy game that challenges mice to build and manage colonies under the watchful eye of a feline overlord 🐈.
The momentum continues in the days that follow, with Lara Croft and the Temple of Osiris 🏹 and Pigeon Simulator 🐦 landing on November 11. Finally, Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 drops on November 14, boasting a robust launch offering of 16 standard 6v6 maps and two large-scale 20v20 maps 💥.
It is important to note the changing economics of the service 💸. Microsoft recently increased the price of the highest Xbox Game Pass tier to $30 per month, up from $20 📈. This 50 percent increase for Game Pass Ultimate follows other price hikes earlier in 2024 💳. Alongside some tier rebranding, the crucial detail for subscribers is that the $30/month Ultimate plan is now required to play these titles on their release day ⚠️.
Below is the complete schedule of Xbox Game Pass additions 📋, including the specific subscription tiers required for each, as well as the titles leaving the service on November 15 ⏳.
November 5 🗓️
Dead Static Drive 🚗 — Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass
Sniper Elite: Resistance 🎯 — Game Pass Premium
November 6 🗓️
Egging On 🥚 — Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass
Whiskerwood 🏰 — Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass
November 7 🗓️
Voidtrain 🚂 — Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass, Game Pass Premium
November 11 🗓️
Great God Grove 🌳 — Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass, Game Pass Premium
Lara Croft and the Temple of Osiris 🏺 — Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass, Game Pass Premium
Pigeon Simulator 🐦 — Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass
November 12 🗓️
Relic Hunters Legend 🛡️ — Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass, Game Pass Premium
Winter Burrow ❄️ — Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass
November 14 🗓️
Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 💣 — Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass
Leaving on November 15 👋
Blacksmith Master (Game Preview) 🔨
Football Manager 2024 Console Edition ⚽
Frostpunk ❄️
Spirittea 🍵
S.T.A.L.K.E.R. 2 Heart of Chernobyl ☢️
Entertainment
🌐 Web browsers have unexpectedly returned to the forefront of the technology landscape.
🌐 Web browsers have unexpectedly returned to the forefront of the technology landscape. Mere days after OpenAI 🤖 unveiled its own AI-centric browser, Microsoft has responded with substantial updates to Edge’s Copilot Mode. The timing, of course, appears hardly coincidental. ⏱️
The features arriving in the browser now were originally teased during Copilot Mode’s debut in July. Headlining the update is “Copilot Actions,” ⚡ Microsoft’s solution for automating multi-step digital chores. While this functionality has existed in the standalone Copilot app for some time, its integration into the Edge preview marks a significant shift. The objective is to offload administrative busywork to the AI—handling tasks such as unsubscribing from a deluge of newsletters 📧 or navigating the friction of booking a restaurant reservation 🍽️ without requiring the user to click through multiple pages. 🖱️
Complementing this is “Journeys,” 🗺️ a feature designed to mitigate the friction of resuming long-term projects. Microsoft’s premise is straightforward: research is rarely linear, and relying on a chaotic clutter of open tabs is inefficient. 📑 Journeys aims to preserve context. If you are in the midst of researching a business venture, Copilot can now summarize the articles you have already consumed, propose logical next steps, and even retrieve that specific tutorial video 🎥 you watched days ago but neglected to save. 💾
To render these interactions more intuitive, Microsoft is also introducing an option to grant the assistant access to your browsing history. 🕰️ This facilitates a truly conversational experience; users can query the bot regarding a specific pair of shoes 👟 viewed last week or request entertainment recommendations 🎬 derived from actual viewing habits rather than generic algorithms. 🤖
Inevitably, granting an AI such deep visibility into user behavior raises valid privacy concerns. 🔒 Microsoft is quick to emphasize that these features are strictly opt-in and are governed by their standard privacy protections. Furthermore, they have implemented clear visual indicators 🚨 so users remain aware of exactly when Copilot is active and processing information.
Nevertheless, the fundamental reality remains: for these tools to be genuinely effective, they require access to a vast amount of personal data. 📊 It is a trade-off between convenience and privacy that warrants serious consideration before clicking “allow.” ⚖️
For those willing to navigate that balance, these features are currently rolling out as a free, limited preview, though access is currently restricted to users within the United States. 🇺🇸 🚀
Entertainment
Microsoft’s Impossible Ask: Inside the Push for 30% Xbox Profit Margins 📉🎮
If you’ve been following Xbox lately, “bleak” is probably the first word that comes to mind. 🌑 The last year has been a relentless parade of bad news for the brand and the broader gaming industry. We saw Microsoft slash 3 percent of its global workforce in May—a move that gutted several studios and sent promising projects to the scrapheap. ✂️🏢 While it looked like a brand in the middle of a standard identity crisis, new reports suggest the rot goes deeper: Microsoft has reportedly been demanding profit margins that the gaming division simply cannot meet. ⚠️
According to Bloomberg, the pressure cooker started in late 2023 when Microsoft CFO Amy Hood handed down a mandate for 30 percent profit margins. 🌋 Internally, they call these “accountability margins.” To put that number in perspective, S&P Global Market Intelligence pegs the industry average at a much humbler 17 to 22 percent. Xbox itself hasn’t even come close lately, averaging between 10 and 20 percent over the last six years. 📊
It’s a massive gap between expectation and reality. ↔️ Neil Barbour, an analyst at S&P Global, told Bloomberg that a 30 percent margin is usually reserved for publishers who are absolutely “nailing it.” 🔨 Xbox, by comparison, was sitting at a mere 12 percent during the first three quarters of 2022. 📉
When asked for comment, Microsoft pivoted to corporate-speak. 👔 A spokesperson told Bloomberg that the company evaluates success on a project-by-project basis and defended the “tough decisions”—like killing off games—as necessary to align resources with their long-term priorities. 🎯💀
This aggressive financial pivot comes right on the heels of Microsoft’s eye-watering $68.7 billion acquisition of Activision Blizzard. 💸 After spending that kind of cash to land *Call of Duty* and *Diablo*, and picking up Bethesda’s parent company ZeniMax back in 2020, the bill is finally coming due. 🧾🤝
The problem is that Microsoft’s biggest selling point is also its biggest financial hurdle: Game Pass. 🎟️🚧 Since 2018, the “day one” release strategy has been a dream for subscribers but a nightmare for individual game margins. Bloomberg’s sources indicate that this model is a primary reason games are missing that 30 percent target. While Xbox tries to compensate with a “member-weighted value” system—essentially a credit given to developers based on play hours—the math heavily favors “forever games” and multiplayer titles. ♾️🧮 Consequently, the future of Xbox looks increasingly safe and corporate. Expect more funding for cheap-to-make projects and proven cash cows, and far fewer risky, creative swings. 🐄🎨
We’re already seeing the fallout of this margin-chasing in real-time. ☢️ To bridge the gap, Microsoft has broken its “exclusive” seal, porting heavy hitters like *Forza Horizon 5* and *Indiana Jones and the Great Circle* to the PS5. 🏎️🤠 They’re also squeezing the consumer directly. Console prices in the US just went up for the second time this year, and Game Pass Ultimate saw a staggering 50 percent price hike in October. 📈 Even the developers are feeling the pinch; just this week, the cost of an Xbox dev kit jumped by $500. 🤏
For a company that once positioned itself as the most consumer-friendly player in the space, the message is now loud and clear: the era of growth at any cost is over, and the era of the “accountability margin” has begun. 📣🏁
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