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Swiftkey gets Bing AI and here’s what you can do with it

It’s live on the Beta channel.

2 min. read

Published onApril 7, 2023

published onApril 7, 2023

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Key notes

Microsoft is getting serious with promoting its Bing AI chatbot. Not only did it reachover 100 million active daily userswithin the first month of its release, but now, the tech giant is slapping the AI tool on its SwiftKey keyboard for Android phone devices.

As spotted by Windows enthusiast@XenoPanther, you can see the Bing logo sitting nicely on the toolbar atop the keyboard.

Bing Chat is coming to SwiftKey. Download the latest SwiftKey beta and sign in to your MSA.Reposted with cleaner screenshots.pic.twitter.com/dBss7gnOzn

With that said, however, the feature is only available for Beta testers, so it may take a while for Bing AI to arrive on general users’ keyboards. You can still head over to theGoogle App Storeand get the SwiftKey beta. If you already have the regular version, you can still install and switch it.

What can you do with Bing AI for SwiftKey keyboards?

What can you do with Bing AI for SwiftKey keyboards?

As mentioned, the Bing button will be on the upper left of your keyboard.

Once you click on it, you’ll see options for Search, Tone, and Chat. The latter will take you straight to the chat mode where you can write your word prompts, ChatGPT style.

With Search, as you may have guessed, you can directly perform a web search directly on your keyboard without having to open a new browser window. In Tone, you can type a phrase and ask the chatbot to paraphrase it under certain tones (funny, formal, descriptive, etc.)

It’s safe to say that Microsoft has been leading in this AI race for quite a while A little over a while ago, Redmond officials launched Bing AI chatbot integration within Skype on mobile and Edge. On those apps, you can summon the chatbot and ask it to create to-do lists, create plans, and more.

Plus,Microsoft Copilotis the next big thing that you don’t want to miss. Powered by the latest GPT-4 model, the tool, which is coming to Office 365 apps soon, can help you draft a topic, create compelling presentations, summarize long email threads, and more with simple word prompts.

What do you think about this addition of Bing AI on Microsoft SwiftKey keyboards on Android? Let us know in the comments!

Rafly Gilang

Rafly is a journalist with growing experience, ranging from technology, business, social, and culture. A holder of the Romanian government scholarship, his writing has been published in several local and national publications.

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Rafly Gilang