Skip to main content

Microsoft’s Office 365 suite just got smarter by freeing Genee from its bottle

Outlook.com Office 365
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Microsoft’s Rajesh Jha, Corporate Vice President of Outlook and Office 365, said on Monday that the company has acquired scheduling service Genee. Powered by artificial intelligence, this service is expected to make Office 365 more streamlined and intelligent when it comes to scheduling and rescheduling meetings. This is due to Genee’s algorithms that are fine-tuned for decision-making and natural language processing.

Co-founders Ben Cheung and Charles Lee launched Genee in 2014. The service allows users to simply describe what kind of meeting they want, when it should take place, and who should attend. Genee “does the rest,” generating the best time and place to have the meeting, and then inform everyone who is involved. If there’s a conflict with the schedule, Genee will provide a “seamless and simple” way to reschedule a meeting.

Prior to Microsoft’s acquisition, the service supported scheduling through Facebook, Twitter, Skype, email, and messaging chatbots via SMS. For instance, the user may want to schedule a 90-minute lunch with a friend or co-worker next week in his/her office. This individual would issue an overall command to “schedule” the lunch date. This command would also use the “lunch” meeting type as well as a 90-minute “duration,” a “timing” of next week, and a “location” described as the individual’s office.

As the example shows, Genee understands five basic descriptors. If setting up the lunch date through email, the user would load up his email client, add the recipient on the “To” field, and send a carbon copy to Genee. The email would provide the recipient with the user’s intention to set up a lunch meeting next week along with the actual command statement to Genee. In this case, the message to Genee would be “Genee, schedule lunch for 90 minutes with Charles at my office next week.”

Once the email is sent, the recipient will get an email from Genee with options for setting up the ideal time and day for the proposed meeting. All of this can even be set up if the individual is replying to a previous email: he/she can simply add a command in the message body and place Genee’s email address in the carbon copy field.

“With today’s news, I’m excited to welcome the Genee team to Microsoft. As we continue to build new Office 365 productivity capabilities and services our customers value, I’m confident the Genee team will help us further our ambition to bring intelligence into every digital experience,” Jha said on Monday.

Genee’s Charles Lee added that after two and a half years, the Genee servers will be shut down on September 1, 2016. Because of this, users will no longer receive “useful reminders and agendas” from Genee. However, all existing entries created with the Genee calendar will remain intact.

“We thank all of you who participated in Genee’s private and public betas,” Lee said in a recent blog post. “The Genee team will take the valuable experiences and lessons that you taught us to Microsoft, where we’ll continue to build amazing next generation intelligent experiences.”

According to Jha, the entire Genee team is now a part of Microsoft. The scheduling service will be incorporated into Office 365, Microsoft’s subscription-based version of this popular Office suite. A timeline regarding as  to when the acquired scheduling technology will roll out to customers is unknown right now.

Kevin Parrish
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kevin started taking PCs apart in the 90s when Quake was on the way and his PC lacked the required components. Since then…
Office 365 becomes Microsoft 365, adds features and the power of A.I.
office app

It’s Office … only better?

Microsoft is unveiling big changes to its Office 365 product, the company said Monday, starting with a name change: Office 365 is now Microsoft 365, a change meant to signify to customers that more of Microsoft is coming in the subscription service, such as tech support and the power of A.I. The company is using A.I. to create new tools, add new rich content types, and include new cloud-powered experiences.

Read more
Working from home? Don’t miss this outstanding Microsoft Office 365 deal
Students using Microsoft Office software on their laptops outside.

With the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, sweeping the nation and employers now instructing their workforce to work from home, Amazon is looking to soften the blow for contractors (and possibly even employees) who need to provide their own equipment: It's currently offering an annual subscription to Microsoft Office 365 Personal for just $48 -- down from the usual $70.

The discount covers both Mac and PC (the activation code is universal) and includes 1TB of OneDrive Cloud Storage and access to OneDrive Personal Vault, as well as unlimited use of Microsoft Excel, Microsoft PowerPoint, Microsoft Outlook, and Microsoft Word. PC users will also be able to use Microsoft Access and Microsoft Publisher, which aren't available for Mac.

Read more