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Mastering Microsoft Copilot for Professionals

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Mastering Microsoft Copilot for Professionals

By: Sam Zuker
Narrated by: Sarah Sun Park
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About this listen

In a world of digital overload and never-ending work demands, Microsoft Copilot stands as a breakthrough in productivity. What once took hours—summarizing reports, formatting presentations, calculating forecasts—can now be done in minutes with precision and personalization. This book is a guide for professionals ready to integrate AI into their daily work, not as a novelty, but as a core tool for speed, clarity, and strategic thinking.

©2025 Sam Zuker (P)2025 Sam Zuker
Career Success Computer Science Machine Theory & Artificial Intelligence Programming Programming & Software Development Software Development Time Management & Productivity
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I'm using copilot more and more, and figured I would have a listen to something on my comute, maybe pick up some tips.

I did not.

This audio book is essentially a spoken list of what copilot can do and some examples of what it can do for some industries and teams, with a few "case studies" of which I'm dubious.

This was clearly collated from AI as evident due to the ends of chapters all seeming to include text like, "If you have any specific examples or scenarios you'd like to explore further" And "Absolutely" randomly interspersed also "Let's dive into" then chapter and book title.

It's also badly collated. Chapter 7 sounds like the end but it's not, it gives you a spiel about what you learned in the book then continues on for 5 more chapters.

There's sooooo much repetition , and I don't mean the same stuff covered, I mean actual paragraphs repeated verbatim.

It's clearly text to speech, that may be the narrators voice, I don't know, but it's been done by text to speech and because of it the janky speech is quite off putting.

All in all, it very much sounds like copilot was prompted to tell you about copilot and it was all pushed through text to speech, that's why I'm dubious about the case studies. I found nothing in this that was practically useful, and I tried to, I wouldn't bother using the time up.

I wouldn't bother.

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