>> Today, in new
generations of workers,
use their phone and pictures as
a primary way to
communicate with a team.
So we want to make
that process a little bit
simpler by adding
some AI into the mix.
Right on my phone, I
can use Office to take
a picture of this data that I
want to share with my team.
Now, Office will be able
to intelligently convert
this data into a real table
in Excel automatically.
I don't have to go
through the process of
manually entering
line item by line item.
It's all going to
happen for me using AI.
Now that this is something
I can insert into Excel,
I can start to work
with it right here on
my phone or I can work
with it on my laptop.
Now that it's in Excel,
I can start to
co-edit and coauthor with my team.
I can format it as a table,
manipulate this data sort,
and work with it a ways I just
couldn't do with a static image.
Now, this intelligence
is also powering
new experiences in PowerPoint
with "Presenter Coach",
which gives me valuable insights as I
rehearse my presentation
like this one,
helping me show up more
prepared every single time.
Let's check it out. So I'm going to
say, ''Rehearse with coach."
Now, before we get started here,
what's going to happen is that,
as I rehearse my presentation,
it's going to give me
real-time feedback
on all the different ways
that I can improve,
whether it's language
choice or pacing.
Let's see what that looks like.
It is so great to be here with
you guys and be able to
share this presentation.
Um I mean, 
you know we've had a really
really great year
and I think there's
some incredible research that we can
share to really kickstart FY20.
Um, and yeah. You know
we had an incredible year,
surpassing 500 million in
revenue for the first time
as a result of
our team's focus on
customer success and
commitment to deliver quality.
All right. Let's finish there.
Now, you may have noticed that it was
giving me that feedback in real time.
That's also been Summarized
in this report here.
It picked up that I said "you guys",
which isn't super gender
inclusive language,
and recommended that I
say "you all" instead.
It caught some of my filler words
like 'um' and 'I mean.'
Even let me know my pace
was a little bit too fast,
a great reminder to slow down.
It even recognized when I was too
dependent on the slide content self,
reading word for word,
and even let me know exactly which
slide I should probably familiarize
myself with a little bit more.
Pretty cool, right? But how do we bring
this same intelligence into
the thing we most often do at work?
Meetings. Most of us here
collaborate in mixed scenarios,
where some of us are in
a meeting room and some of
us are dialing in remotely.
The challenge with these types of
meetings is that when the
people in the room get
up to do something like brainstorm
on a physical whiteboard,
the team online can't really
see what's going on or
engage the content,
and it's hard to feel included.
Microsoft Teams wants
to ensure everyone is
equally engaged in the brainstorming
process. Let's check out how.
This Microsoft Teams room has
a dedicated whiteboard camera
that we can connect.
Using AI, the camera will be able
to find the whiteboard image,
and pull it into focus
for the team online,
helping them engage with the content.
It also detects people and
makes them transparent.
So as I walk in front of
the whiteboard to write something,
the team online will be able to
see the content right through me.
Like literally, right through me.
