Microsoft Build 2026 starts today: follow Copilot AI news and more (live)
We’re on the ground in San Francisco for Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella’s keynote speech. Here’s what’s happening.
Microsoft Build 2026 starts on Tuesday, June 2.
Microsoft/Jeffrey Hazelwood/CNETIt’s software conference season, and this week it’s Microsoft’s turn. At Microsoft Build 2026, the company is expected to unveil a series of new updates to its many software products, including Copilot and Windows.
CEO Satya Nadella kicks off the event on Tuesday. Although conferences like Microsoft Build are primarily aimed at developers, many announcements often affect anyone using those developers’ products. In the case of Microsoft, there are many of us. There will undoubtedly be new developments regarding AI. Microsoft plans to transform its AI, named Copilot, from a simple chatbot to “asynchronous colleagues capable of executing long-running tasks in key areas,” Nadella said on an earnings call last week.
Our CNET team is on the ground in San Francisco covering the event live. Follow us as we track every major announcement.
How to watch the Microsoft Build keynote
You can follow all the AI news by tuning into the YouTube livestream here. You can also tune into the CNET livestream and chat with us in chat as the event unfolds. Nadella’s keynote speech is scheduled to begin at 9:30 a.m. PT (12:30 p.m. ET, 5:30 p.m. BST) Tuesday, June 2.
Ahead of Apple’s WWDC conference next week, Microsoft has nothing to lose
By Patrick Hollande
Apple’s developer conference will take place next week.
René Ramos/CNETMicrosoft Build kicks off just days before Apple hosts its own developers conference, WWDC 2026. The two companies have been linked since the 1980s and yet, in 2026, they couldn’t be more different. Microsoft still makes Windows, but its pursuit of AI with Copilot seems to be taking the top spot lately. Apple is a very successful hardware and software company that is trying to find its place in AI and appears to be well behind Microsoft and others. Today’s Build talk isn’t even about Apple: it’s rather Google, OpenAI and Anthropic that should worry Microsoft.
While Apple has had a lot of success with its wait-and-see approach to new categories, Apple Intelligence hasn’t made much of a splash. Apple seems stuck in terms of AI, albeit in the context of a very successful products, software and services business. This year’s WWDC will also be important because it will be the last major event with Tim Cook as Apple CEO.
We’ve already seen some big new hardware
By Jon Reed
The RTX Spark under the hood of the Surface Laptop Ultra.
MicrosoftWe expect to hear a lot about software today. This is, after all, a developers conference. But all that software has to run on something, and we got a glimpse of some interesting new hardware the other day at the Computex show in Taiwan.
Nvidia announced a new Arm-based system-on-a-chip platform for Windows, the RTX Spark, which Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said is “reinventing the personal computer.”
The lineup, scheduled to ship this fall, includes laptops from Microsoft, Dell, Asus, HP, Lenovo and MSI as well as desktop minicomputers.
The bottom line is that these are computers specifically designed to handle on-device AI tasks, particularly inference, which is when a model actually “thinks” to make things happen. This will be done on a wearable platform designed for agents, which are AI robots capable of performing tasks independently. So keep that in mind when you hear the word “agent” many times today.
What Microsoft needs to prove after Google I/O
By Patrick Hollande
Google’s developer conference in May brought a lot of AI news.
Google/Screenshot by CNETTuesday’s kickoff for Microsoft Build follows Google I/O, which was packed with Gemini expansions in agentic AI. Google previewed the new versions of Gemini: Gemini 3.5 Flash, Gemini Spark and a teaser for Gemini 3.5 Pro.
There are also Gemini-based features featured in Maps, YouTube, and Google Docs that support more natural, disjointed verbal prompts, or as Google CEO Sundar Pichai described it, “a verbal brain dump.” We saw the launch of Gemini Omni, a hyper-realistic video generation tool that can also augment real people videos, all from verbal prompts.
Google has set the bar pretty high for Microsoft. It will be interesting to see where Copilot AI stands in relation to Google’s announcements and whether we will see new features that match it. But it would be crazy if Microsoft announced Copilot-powered smart glasses to rival the Android XR specs that Google showed off at I/O!
Microsoft CTO: Making AI more usable
By Corinne Reichert
Kevin Scott, Microsoft CTO, speaking in May 2025.
Jason Redmond/AFP/Getty ImagesSpeaking at a Build event Monday evening, Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott said one of the challenges with new AI tools is “how to figure out how to make these capabilities more useful” so that people will actually use them.
“Pure human psychology…stifles things,” Scott said.
In other words, people need proof that this new way of doing things is better than what they are used to. This is especially true when it comes to agentic AI, which he says requires a lot of trust.
“We need to think hard about what it means to build trustworthy software,” Scott said, adding that only when people trust the software will they hand over control of their devices to an autonomous assistant.
Finally, he said that creating a tool with artificial intelligence does not automatically make it useful.
“Just because you use AI to create a lot of activity doesn’t mean the activity you create has value,” he said, referring to a “meme chat app” he created solely to irritate his children.
We are on the ground in San Francisco
By Corinne Reichert
We are ready for Microsoft Build.
Faith Chihil/CNETCNET’s Faith Chihil and Corinne Reichert arrived at Microsoft Build 2026, having collected their badges in the media registration area the day before the conference kicked off.
Wait, what is Microsoft Build?
By Katelyn Chedraoui
Satya Nadella at last year’s Microsoft Build.
Microsoft/Screenshot by CNETThere’s no shame in asking the question: What is Microsoft Build, anyway? The technical answer is that it is Microsoft’s annual developer conference, where the tech giant shares updates and other progress reports on its software products. The more interesting answer is that this is all we know for sure.
Developer conferences are opportunities for companies to showcase new projects, demonstrate experimental tools, and introduce us to the next generation of the company. In recent years, Microsoft’s Build conferences have been all about AI, so we expect to hear a lot about Copilot today.




























