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365bi

@365EDUBI

A firm believer that technology is a way to to allow us to be creative, work more productively and to build better relationships.

Edmonton, Alberta Katılım Ekim 2019
88 Takip Edilen47 Takipçiler
Nicolas Bustamante
Nicolas Bustamante@nicbstme·
For what it's worth, I love using M365 & Copilot. Before working at Microsoft, I had the same perspective as my San Francisco startup friends, aka Copilot is a clunky, confusing product. But today I use it all the time. 1/ Copilot is everywhere. When I have a question and I'm on Teams, PowerPoint, Outlook, the icon is always there. It’s even a key on my computer keyboard! It's deeply integrated with all the software I use (which are all made by MSFT). 2/ Copilot is integrated to everything. I'm new, so I often have questions about the org chart, some documents on SharePoint I can't find but Copilot can, some acronyms I don't understand but Copilot has our company knowledge, etc. There is also the multi-model part. This is especially true for coding with Copilot-cli, where depending on the task, I might use GPT 5.5 or Opus 4.7. Same when I use the Excel/Powerpoint/Word agents. Now, the elephant in the room, why does Copilot have a bad reputation on X? My own view, and I might be wrong: 1/ We often mess up. We are a 51-year-old large company moving at the speed of AI, and sometimes we ship inconsistent product experiences or product experiments that we unify later. 2/ Deployment takes a long time, so users often have older versions of Copilot. Also some great features are first available in our Frontier program and will be generally available later. 3/ Privacy and compliance are very important for us, so sometimes IT admins haven't unlocked all the Copilot features yet. 4/ Microsoft is often compared to the world’s most advanced AI labs (some didn’t even exist five years ago and are the fastest-growing businesses in history!). IMO that comparison is a compliment. It pushes us to hold ourselves to an even higher standard in how we serve our customers. Voila, just my 2 cents! (talking about cents, it's wild that you can have elite AI deeply integrated everywhere in all the software stack for $30/month) ps: I'm French, so I’m very direct and extremely low BS. I wouldn't have written that if it weren’t my reality.
Bill Ackman@BillAckman

As two of the largest forces in equity markets -- growing index ownership and increasing amounts of capital controlled by extremely short-term-oriented, leveraged, volatility-intolerant investors -- converge, we have found occasional opportunities to acquire some of the most dominant long-term compounding franchises at attractive valuations. For example, we acquired Alphabet $GOOG when the stock declined substantially on the release of ChatGPT in late 2022, Amazon $AMZN in the weeks following Liberation Day, and $META more recently on the market's response to the company's unexpectedly large cap ex guidance and expenditures. In our 13F which we will file later today, we will disclose a new position in Microsoft, a company we have followed for many years now offered at a highly compelling valuation. While $PSUS will not be filing a 13F tomorrow, it has also recently made $MFST a core holding. Microsoft operates two of the most valuable franchises in enterprise technology, which account for approximately 70% of the company's overall profits: M365 and Azure. M365, the company's productivity suite, is the dominant operating platform for knowledge work, with over 450 million workers using Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and Teams on a daily basis. Azure is the world's second-largest hyperscaler cloud platform and, like AWS in our Amazon investment, is a direct beneficiary of the multi-decade migration of enterprise IT workloads to the cloud, which is now further accelerated by surging demand for AI inference workloads. Both M365 and Azure are underpinned by Microsoft's unparalleled enterprise distribution and the security, compliance, and identity infrastructure it has built and refined over decades. Beyond these core franchises, Microsoft also owns a portfolio of other leading businesses, including LinkedIn (the world's largest professional network with 1.3 billion members), its gaming platform (Xbox and Activision Blizzard), and search and news advertising (Bing and the Edge browser). We began building our position in MSFT in February following a meaningful share price decline after the company reported its fiscal Q2 2026 results. We were able to establish our position at a valuation of 21 times forward earnings, broadly in line with the market multiple and well below Microsoft's trading average over the last few years. Notably, MSFT's headline multiple does not reflect the value of Microsoft's approximately 27% economic interest in OpenAI, which would represent approximately $200 billion, or 7% of Microsoft's market capitalization, at OpenAI's most recent funding round valuation. We believe Microsoft's recent share price decline has been principally driven by investor concerns around two key issues: i) the competitive positioning of M365 against increasingly capable AI lab offerings (notably Anthropic's Claude Cowork), and ii) the durability of Azure's growth, especially in light of Microsoft's evolving relationship with OpenAI. In our view, investors underestimate the resilience of the M365 franchise given its deeply embedded role across enterprises and highly attractive price-value proposition. Unlike point software solutions, which may be vulnerable to disintermediation by better-performing AI alternatives, M365 is tightly integrated into the daily workflow of nearly every large enterprise and is supported by Microsoft's identity, security, compliance, and data governance infrastructure, which would be nearly impossible to replicate. Attractive bundle economics further reinforce Microsoft's advantage, with monthly average revenue per user on the M365 suite at approximately $20, less than half of what customers would pay to purchase the underlying applications individually from different vendors. Moreover, we are encouraged to see Microsoft prioritizing its R&D efforts and investment in Copilot, its own AI agent embedded across M365, with direct involvement from CEO Satya Nadella. We believe these efforts will translate into improved product velocity and greater customer adoption over time. Alongside Copilot's rollout, the company has also begun shifting its pricing model from pure per-seat licensing to a hybrid model of seats plus metered consumption, which helps expand the company’s revenue opportunity as AI agents drive incremental usage that a seat-only structure would not capture. These initiatives should help sustain M365’s strong underlying growth momentum, which was already evident in the business unit’s 15% revenue growth (in constant currency) last quarter. We believe concerns regarding Azure's growth trajectory are similarly misplaced, particularly in light of the franchise's exceptional recent performance. Azure revenue grew 39% in constant currency last quarter, with company guiding to modest acceleration through the second half of the year. We view Microsoft's recent decision to restructure its OpenAI partnership not as a concession but as part of a deliberate pivot toward a more open, multi-model architecture that better serves enterprise customers, who increasingly seek optionality across model providers. Microsoft recently disclosed that over 10,000 enterprise customers have used more than one model on Azure Foundry, the company’s modular AI model marketplace. This model-agnostic approach also strengthens Copilot, which can auto-route queries across multiple models to deliver the optimal output for a given task. To support Azure's rapid growth amid persistent supply constraints, Microsoft has raised its calendar year 2026 capex budget to approximately $190 billion. Consistent with what we have observed at hyperscaler peers Amazon and Google, we view this spend as growth capex that should drive future revenue generation. This is particularly true for Microsoft, given that roughly two-thirds of its capex budget is allocated to server and networking equipment that correlates directly with near-term revenue. Like our purchases of $GOOG, $AMZN, and $META, we believe that $MSFT offers analogous and compelling long-term value at today's valuation.

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365bi
365bi@365EDUBI·
@FlowAltDelete For PoC at moment as, not released on Canadian GEO Tenants yet and we need ours fenced.
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365bi retweetledi
Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP
Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP@FlowAltDelete·
UNCUT Copilot Cowork video is live. I gave it a simple job: Read an external email. Understand the meeting request. Schedule the meeting. No polished demo script. No fake productivity theatre. Just Cowork doing real Microsoft 365 work. Watch it here: youtu.be/4LSsWUHgaw0?si…
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365bi
365bi@365EDUBI·
@FlowAltDelete Cowork has been better, everything connected to Git and Planner as my Kaban lol All brand new image screens too.
365bi tweet media365bi tweet media365bi tweet media
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Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP
Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP@FlowAltDelete·
@365EDUBI These are some awesome apps. Love the gamification. My ADHD brain goes nuts for that haha. Why App Builder though? Doesn’t all users need M365 Copilot license to run?
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Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP
Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP@FlowAltDelete·
I built a full SEGA Genesis-style dungeon crawler with AI. Not a mockup. Not a demo. A real playable game. - 30 floors. - Enemies. - Weapons. - Inventory. - Hunger. - Dragon boss. - Original music. - One HTML file. >Copilot Cowork wrote the code. >GPT Images made the sprites. >ChatGPT generated the soundtrack. I directed. Full blog on how I did this in the comments below👇
Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP tweet media
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365bi
365bi@365EDUBI·
@FlowAltDelete Code builder has ability to port to SharePoint site but once it build it, the SPFx was not going to work. Migrated over to Cowork. App will host in Azure Web App but backend onto Dataverse longer term
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365bi
365bi@365EDUBI·
@FlowAltDelete I just got it to redesign our whole HR Administration Guide from Word into full wiki / Q &A and build all the SharePoint SPFX Web Parts
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Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP
Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP@FlowAltDelete·
Copilot Cowork prompt of the day: This one was simple, I was literally in bed. Opened M365 App on iOS and told Copilot Cowork to find 2 separate 1-hour focus blocks for Monday morning. It checked my calendar. Found the gaps. Booked the time. AGENTS don’t need you sitting at a desk. Prompt in the comments below 👇
Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP tweet mediaJosh Cook | Microsoft MVP tweet mediaJosh Cook | Microsoft MVP tweet media
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Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP
Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP@FlowAltDelete·
Okay, I have built a few Plugins for Copilot Cowork. Do you want a full tutorial on building your own Plugin? Blog or video or both. Let me know👇
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365bi
365bi@365EDUBI·
@FlowAltDelete Does not appear to be able to utilize custom skills that has been created yet
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Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP
Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP@FlowAltDelete·
Copilot Cowork is now available on mobile. This is the move. Hand tasks to Cowork ANYWHERE. In your hand. Between meetings. On the move. Microsoft is cooking.
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365bi
365bi@365EDUBI·
@FlowAltDelete @smccnn I’ve been using a requirements skill in Cowork. Early days but it appears to have worked pretty well so far.
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Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP
Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP@FlowAltDelete·
Copilot Cowork SURVIVAL TIP. Tell Copilot Cowork to create a requirements.md file at the start of your session. Not later. At the start. Have it track: decisions, requirements, open items, conversation context, audit notes, files created. Then if the session glitches or you need a fresh chat, open the Output folder, copy the OneDrive link, paste it into the new session, and tell Cowork: Use the files from our previous session. This has saved me more than once. Cowork loves creating files. Make it create the one that keeps your work alive. Mini blog post link in the comments👇
Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP tweet media
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z - Caniacforlife
z - Caniacforlife@hurricanesmill·
@ibamboozIe I swear, people genuinely think that the Canes are straight trash. We finished second in the league, but hardly anyone is picking us. It’s fine, but it’s so strange. Ottawa is very good, but damn, we’re not garbage.
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bamboozle
bamboozle@ibamboozIe·
Buffalo in 6 Tampa in 5 Ottawa in 7 Pittsburgh in 4 Colorado in 6 Dallas in 5 Utah in 7 Anaheim in 7 Run it
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Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP
Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP@FlowAltDelete·
@asha_shar, any local 4 player games I can play with my kids on Xbox? Our newest favourite is Wobbly Life I find it hard to find good local 4 player games.
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365bi
365bi@365EDUBI·
@FlowAltDelete Just added Claude, Teams IQ and Word IQ to my Data Agent and it really makes a difference
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Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP
Josh Cook | Microsoft MVP@FlowAltDelete·
Most people are still clicking around Microsoft 365 manually. I built an agent instead. Connected to Work IQ, MCP servers and tools. M365 Claude Copilot can: > send emails > send Teams messages > schedule meetings > create Word docs I can tell it: "Send a status update to the marketing internal group chat" "Reply to all my unread Teams messages" "Based on my last meeting, create a summary and send it to all attendees" That’s not a chatbot. That’s a worker.
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Bradley Schacht
Bradley Schacht@BradleySchacht·
If you hear "Data Warehouse Medallion Architecture" do you think data warehouse only or do you think lakehouse with a data warehouse for the gold layer?
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