Microsoft Brings Copilot to Edge Mobile, Retires Copilot Mode
Updated
Updated · Windows Blog · May 13
Microsoft Brings Copilot to Edge Mobile, Retires Copilot Mode
12 articles · Updated · Windows Blog · May 13
Edge’s latest update extends Copilot features to the mobile app for the first time, adding multi-tab reasoning, Voice, Vision and a redesigned new tab page alongside desktop.
Journeys is now broadly available on desktop in English markets and on mobile in the U.S., grouping browsing history into topic cards with summaries and suggested next steps.
New desktop productivity tools include Study and Learn mode, writing assistance, quiz and flashcard generation, and tab-to-podcast conversion, though some features are limited to U.S. users or English markets.
Microsoft said Copilot can now use open tabs, browsing history and past chats—with user permission—to deliver more relevant answers, while showing visual cues when it is listening, viewing or acting.
The update folds AI features directly into Edge as Microsoft retires Copilot Mode, while keeping some advanced capabilities such as Browse with Copilot limited to U.S. Microsoft 365 Premium subscribers.
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