



Putting the new AI-enhanced search engine into the hands of smartphone users is meant to give Microsoft an advantage over Google, which dominates the internet search business but hasn’t yet released such a chatbot to the public. The company said Wednesday it is bringing the new AI technology to its Bing smartphone app, as well as the app for its Edge internet browser, though it is still requiring people to sign up for a waitlist before using it. Stay tuned as we will update if and when Microsoft responds with an official announcement about this issue.Microsoft is ready to take its new Bing chatbot mainstream - less than a week after making major fixes to stop the artificially intelligent search engine from going off the rails. The Twitter account has been busy responding to complaints (and directing users to DMs) but has not yet made a public statement as of this writing. For the desktop application, you can do the same within the View tab. For the web version of Outlook, you can do that by clicking the gear icon and toggling Focused Inbox off. If your mobile Outlook app (or any Outlook-connected email client, for that matter) is bombarded with spam, it might be a good idea to temporarily turn off notifications so you're not being pinged every other minute by errant junk mail.Īnother option is to disable Focused Inbox altogether, especially since this Outlook feature is currently not functioning right anyway. There are some steps you can take to reduce the annoyance of seeing spam popping up in your Inbox while we wait for Microsoft to roll out a fix the junk filter itself. The Focused Inbox works across personal and professional accounts, and supposedly, "the more you use it, the better it gets," according to Microsoft's support page. The Focused Inbox is supposed to "intelligently" pre-sort your Outlook inbox into two sections: Focused (where your most important messages go), while the rest go to Other where messages there are still easily accessible but out of the way.
