News & features
Introducing AutoGen Studio: A low-code interface for building multi-agent workflows
| Victor Dibia, Gagan Bansal, Jingya Chen, Suff Syed, Adam Fourney, Erkang (Eric) Zhu, Chi Wang, and Saleema Amershi
AutoGen Studio, built on Microsoft’s flexible open-source AutoGen framework for orchestrating AI agents, provides an intuitive user-friendly interface that enables developers to rapidly build, test, customize, and share multi-agent AI solutions—with little or no coding.
In the news | WIRED
Many Chatbots Make Light Work 🤝🤖 🎉
Turning to a friend or coworker can make tricky problems easier to tackle. Now it looks like having AI chatbots team up with each other can make them more effective. I’ve been playing this week with AutoGen, an open source…
In the news | Foundation Capital
The Promise of Multi-Agent AI
Agents have been a cornerstone of human-computer interaction for decades, from the friendly Clippy of Microsoft Office fame to auto-suggestions in Google Docs and NPCs in video games. While these early agents hinted at the potential for personalized, goal-oriented interactions,…
Microsoft at CHI 2024: Innovations in human-centered design
From immersive virtual experiences to interactive design tools, Microsoft Research is at the frontier of exploring how people engage with technology. Discover our latest breakthroughs in human-computer interaction research at CHI 2024.
In the news | Economist
Today’s AI models are impressive. Teams of them will be formidable
On may 13th Openai unveiled its latest model, gpt-4o. Mira Murati, the company’s chief technology officer, called it the “future of interaction between ourselves and the machines”, because users will be able to speak to the model, which will talk…
In the news | The Sequence
My Five Favorite AI Papers of 2023
Today marks the final issue of 2023, and I want to start by expressing my gratitude for your support. The Sequence has grown organically to over 165,000 subscribers this year. Thank you all for your continued support. Today's edition will…