
The token-hungry developers were there. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang was there (virtually). The Chainsmokers were there. But Microsoft’s rumored Copilot “Super App” was not.
According to various reports and screenshots posted on social media over the past couple of days, Microsoft’s Copilot Super App was ready for its close-up. Reports indicated that the Copilot Super App is meant to provide a single Copilot experience, or shell, with various modes, possibly including a Copilot Chat mode; GitHub Copilot coding mode; Cowork mode for knowledge workers and prosumers; the “Scout” OpenClaw-based work mode; and some kind of Autopilot always-on agent mode.
Some had expected Microsoft could make the Copilot Super App its “one more thing” announcement during the kick-off keynote at the Microsoft Build 2026 conference on June 2. But the app, in whatever form it currently may exist, was a no-show.
It wasn’t a total wash, however. CEO Satya Nadella did mention the Super App in passing.
“Come summer, we will be bringing coding to all knowledge work within one Copilot Super App. That’s really exciting. So you’re going to have Chat, Cowork, and Code all in Copilot,” Nadella told the Build audience in San Francisco.
The premise of a Copilot super app makes sense on several fronts. Microsoft is looking for a way reclaim its early-mover position in AI coding that it carved out with GitHub Copilot. The company needs an answer to the growing popularity of Anthropic’s Claude Code and OpenAI’s Codex. And given Microsoft is working to unify its consumer and commercial Copilot experiences, an all-in-one Copilot workspace could provide a neat solution.
Jacob Andreou, recently appointed executive vice president of Copilot, is charged with this unification and reports directly to Nadella as part of a small team replacing long-time head of Microsoft’s Experiences and Devices unit, Rajesh Jha.
Andreou has what I’d consider a daunting task. And not just because he is based in Los Angeles and came to Microsoft just a year and a half ago via an unconventional path (Snap and then Greylock Partners).
Microsoft originally tried to position its various Copilots as a single product, even though they used different data sources, had different interfaces and provided different types of access.
More recently, officials acknowledged this and made distinctions between consumer Copilot, GitHub Copilot and Microsoft 365 Copilot for businesses as separate, but related offerings. But now the company seems to be veering back toward trying to make Copilot seem like a single entity in terms of brand and across consumer and enterprise lines.
Last week, Microsoft took a step toward improving the Microsoft 365 Copilot user experience with a redesign, which made the prompt box bigger and results appear more quickly. But it didn’t go so far as to show off how the new UI will dovetail with the coming Super App.
A couple of the supposed elements of the Super App did get airtime at Build. Scout, which Microsoft describes as a “personal agent for work” is built on the open-source OpenClaw framework. Scout can access data in Microsoft apps like Teams, Outlook and SharePoint thanks to Microsoft’s WorkIQ context layer, so it can proactively handle tasks such as prepping for meetings and fixing scheduling conflicts without having to ask users for approval.
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Microsoft is making Scout available to its customers in its “Frontier” testing program starting today, June 2. Up until now, it’s been in testing inside Microsoft.
If Scout sounds familiar, it should. Scout is the official name of the OpenClaw skunkworks project that’s been the focus of Microsoft Corporate Vice President Omar Shahine and team (profiled here on GeekWire last month). Microsoft has been working to add guardrails around OpenClaw and Scout to try to allay security fears that many enterprise companies, including Microsoft itself, have expressed about OpenClaw’s always-on way of operating.
Scout is considered the first public example of this new category of always-on agents that Microsoft is calling “Autopilots.”
After sitting through the three-hour (!) Build opening keynote, I was left wondering why Microsoft didn’t show off, even fleetingly, the coming Copilot Super App.
Was it because execs felt they had so many other announcements that they didn’t want it to get lost in the mix? They’re waiting for the “Ask Copilot” taskbar feature to go live on Windows 11? Or maybe the Super App is just not yet stable enough to demo? (Given how quickly Microsoft is moving from idea to private testing with Scout, making sure a product is baked before showing it publicly doesn’t seem to be much of a concern at Microsoft.)
Sure, the pressure is on with AI to announce or be eclipsed, like never before. And Microsoft is no stranger to “creatively architected” demos of not-yet-finished products. (I see you, Longhorn.)
But can Microsoft really move from pilot to shipping products at this pace and not alienate enterprises that have substantial security, compliance, data-residency and other hefty requirements? I guess we’ll see….