What is 'Copilot' in Microsoft's AI strategy and how does it relate to Azure OpenAI?
Copilot integrates LLM-powered AI assistance into Microsoft 365, GitHub, Azure, and more — all built on Azure OpenAI Service.
Why this answer
Option B is correct because Microsoft's 'Copilot' is a family of AI assistants integrated into products like Microsoft 365, GitHub, and Windows, which leverage Azure OpenAI models (including GPT-4) to provide natural language interactions and task automation. This directly aligns with the AI-900 domain of describing generative AI workloads on Azure, as Copilot exemplifies how Azure OpenAI's capabilities are embedded into end-user experiences.
Exam trap
The trap here is that candidates may confuse 'Copilot' with a generic AI assistant or assume it is a standalone model, when in fact it is a branded product that specifically integrates Azure OpenAI models into Microsoft's ecosystem, not a separate AI system.
How to eliminate wrong answers
Option A is wrong because it describes a flight simulation game, which is unrelated to Microsoft's AI strategy or Azure OpenAI; Copilot is not a gaming product. Option C is wrong because Copilot is not an open-source framework; it is a proprietary Microsoft product that relies on Azure OpenAI, and building custom AI assistants independent of Microsoft would not use Copilot's architecture. Option D is wrong because Copilot is a primary AI assistant that generates responses, not a secondary model that validates outputs; validation or review models are separate components (e.g., content filters) in Azure OpenAI, not part of Copilot's definition.