Copilot isn’t enough. Microsoft wants to build an AI that doesn't wait for you to ask it something. Microsoft Scout, announced at Build 2026 today, connects to your Teams messages, Outlook, OneDrive, and SharePoint, then runs in the background doing the coordination work you keep forgetting to do—scheduling meetings across time zones, flagging stalled decisions, blocking calendar time before your deadline ambushes you on a Tuesday afternoon.
Microsoft calls this a new category: "Autopilots." Not agents you prompt. Not chatbots you supervise. Things that just run.
Now, the Hermes and OpenClaw dudes may be rolling their eyes because, yes, they have been doing this for what feels like ages. The difference now is who's getting it next. Scout lives inside Microsoft 365, which means it lands on the desks of people who have never heard of (or cared about) OpenClaw, haven't opened a terminal in their lives, and just want their 2 p.m. meeting prep handled without digging through three calendar apps.
That's a much larger population than the developers raving about OpenClaw on GitHub.
Microsoft's long agentic arc
To be fair, Microsoft was early. In February 2023, Yusuf Mehdi introduced the Copilot sidebar for Edge—a context-aware assistant sitting alongside your browser, aware of what you were reading. Most people closed it immediately. The idea was right; the timing was early and the use case wasn't obvious enough yet.
Then at Build 2025, GitHub Copilot became a fully autonomous coding agent. By July, Copilot Mode for Edge brought agentic browsing into the new-tab experience. Now Scout brings the same logic to the layer where most people actually work—email, calendar, meetings, files—rather than code or browser tabs.
Scout is based on OpenClaw, the agentic AI tool that sparked a new era of AI applications. The project launched in January 2026 as an open-source personal agent you could run locally, accumulated 180,000 GitHub stars in roughly three months, and turned its Austrian developer Peter Steinberger into someone both OpenAI and Meta were racing to hire. (For those not keeping track, OpenAI won that race in February).
Microsoft, rather than compete with another closed agent framework, built Scout on top of the already solid and known OpenClaw repository and committed to contributing enterprise-grade policy controls back upstream.
OpenClaw gets mainstream distribution through Microsoft. Microsoft gets a shortcut to a billion dollar idea, gets the credibility of an open-source foundation, and skips the part where it has to explain what an "agent runtime" is to enterprise customers who just want their meeting prep done.
What else Microsoft announced this week
Scout didn't land alone. The Work IQ APIs go generally available June 16—that's the organizational intelligence layer that builds a real-time model of how your company actually operates, pulling from email, calendar, meetings, files, and collaboration patterns. According to Microsoft, Fortune 500 organizations average over 600 terabytes of this data. The APIs process it 2x faster than traditional Microsoft 365 APIs and cut token usage by 80% in testing—numbers that matter to the developers building the next generation of enterprise agents on top of this stack.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella opened Build 2026's keynote at Fort Mason Center in San Francisco telling 2,500 developers that agents are "the new operating system for work." Windows itself is being repositioned as a runtime for AI agents, with new execution containers and local model support announced alongside Scout.
Scout is available now in private preview for a select group of customers and through Microsoft's Frontier program. Access requires Intune policy configuration, an opt-in attestation, and a GitHub Copilot license to install.
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