Microsoft’s OneDrive will soon be smart enough to transcribe your video and audio files using AI.
In a statement this week, the company noted that the service will support more than 320 different video and audio file types.
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This is largely or organisations that share files constantly across its Microsoft 365 suite — the online version of Microsoft Office.
“While viewing a video or listening to an audio file, a full transcript (improving both accessibility and search) will show directly in our industry-leading viewer,” the company adds, hinting that a transcript will appear automatically with timestamps alongside the video or audio playing.
“Once you’re ready to make a video broadly available across the organization, you can upload and publish to Microsoft Stream,” the company adds.
Notably, transcriptions aren’t the only advancement heading to OneDrive. The AI-powered file service will also support in-video face detection and automatic captions soon.
Further advancements are set to arrive for Microsoft 365 subscribers this year too, including:
- Intelligent image search that also draws context and text from within images, like till receipts.
- Intelligent file recommendations, which will personalise the files available on your 365 dashboard to better suit your work habits, or co-worker connections.
- File insights, which provides analytics on the number of views for documents, viewer information and summaries.
- Intelligent sharing, which suggests you share files with attendees of a meeting once said meeting is over. This is also tied to the events on the Outlook Calendar.
Microsoft’s also promising a few quality of life improvements, and the ability to restore files on OneDrive.
Many of these tweaks will be available before the end of the year.
Feature image: Microsoft