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        Some Cortana Features Ending as Part of Microsoft 365 Shift 
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- August 03, 2020
Microsoft may be promoting  Cortana   more as a Microsoft 365 business perk, but the digital assistant will soon see several of its capabilities falling out of support.
Microsoft detailed its Cortana end-of-support plans in a  support  article on Friday. It described Cortana's current development direction as aiming more  toward an "AI-powered assistant experience in Microsoft 365." The changes primarily affect U.S.  consumers.
Consumers still will be able to access Cortana via  Microsoft 365 mobile apps, such as the Outlook Mobile App and the coming Teams  Mobile Apps. However, possibly they'd need a Microsoft 365 subscription, which  typically just gets purchased by organizations. This point wasn't really clarified  in the support article. 
The support article suggested that Cortana in the Windows  10 Home edition for consumers would continue, pointing to a new chat-based  scheduling experience that was described  back in May.
Consumer Cortana End-of-Support  Dates
The Cortana end-of-support milestones for U.S. consumers  were described as follows:
  - Sept. 7: Support for "all third-party  Cortana skills" will end.
- Early 2021: Support for mobile Cortana apps on  Android and iOS will end.
- Jan. 2021: Support for the Harman Kardon  Invoke speaker will end.
- Sometime in 2021: Microsoft Surface Headphones  (first version) will lose support for "the previous version of Cortana."
A Cortana "skill" is a set of developer tools  describing a task that Cortana can perform, according to this "Cortana  Skills Kit" document. Application developers typically would use the  Cortana Skills Kit to support their software products interfacing with Cortana,  but Microsoft will be ending such "third-party" (non-Microsoft)  development efforts, it seems, at least in the U.S. market.
While dedicated mobile apps support for Cortana will end  next year, it'll still be possible to use Cortana with the Outlook Mobile App  to manage calendar items, e-mails and join meetings, the support article  indicated. In addition, it'll be possible to access Cortana in the coming Microsoft  Teams mobile applications. Microsoft is planning to deliver Cortana in the  Teams mobile app for Android and iOS devices sometime this year for U.S. Microsoft  365 Enterprise users, per an  earlier Microsoft announcement.
Microsoft claimed that removing Cortana support from the  Harman Kardon Invoke speaker will be eased by plans to enable Bluetooth  connections with the speaker. The Bluetooth addition will happen via a device  firmware update that's expected to arrive in "early 2021." 
"After the [firmware] update is installed, your  Invoke will perform like other Bluetooth speakers -- you will be able to pair  it with your phone or other audio source and stream music to it,"  Microsoft explained in a  FAQ document. "But Cortana and other Wi-Fi functions will no longer be  available."
Surface Headphones and Surface Earbuds will still be able  to use Cortana via the Outlook Mobile App, Microsoft indicated.
Cortana's Microsoft  365 Transition
Microsoft had earlier talked about Cortana transitioning  into a Microsoft 365 solution back  in February. At that time, Microsoft described some regional differences in  its use, and indicated that the use of a Microsoft Account would be required  with Cortana. Additionally, Microsoft had forecast the ending of third-party  skills support for consumers, including ending support for connected home and  music scenarios. 
A ZDNet article by veteran Microsoft  journalist Mary Jo Foley suggested that Microsoft hadn't really gotten a good  developer response on Cortana skills development. She also indicated that users  can "expect Cortana to be part of Microsoft's Project Cortex knowledge management service, due  this fall."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.