Close Menu
Technology Mag

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot
    Google Photos is coming to Samsung TVs in 2026

    Google Photos is coming to Samsung TVs in 2026

    December 29, 2025
    LG announces new UltraGear evo gaming monitors with AI upscaling

    LG announces new UltraGear evo gaming monitors with AI upscaling

    December 28, 2025
    Ubisoft shuts down ‘Rainbow Six Siege’ servers following hack

    Ubisoft shuts down ‘Rainbow Six Siege’ servers following hack

    December 28, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Subscribe
    Technology Mag
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • Home
    • News
    • Business
    • Games
    • Gear
    • Reviews
    • Science
    • Security
    • Trending
    • Press Release
    Technology Mag
    Home » Microsoft’s holiday Copilot ad is wrapped in empty promises
    News

    Microsoft’s holiday Copilot ad is wrapped in empty promises

    News RoomBy News RoomDecember 18, 20256 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email
    Microsoft’s holiday Copilot ad is wrapped in empty promises

    Microsoft is at it again with another round of ads showing people talking to Copilot AI on their computers. This time it’s holiday-themed, including a cameo from the big man in red. The 30-second TV spot asks if you’re “ready for the holidays” and features actors in various festive home settings asking Copilot for some ho-ho-ho-help with everything from holiday lighting and cooking to oversized outdoor decorations.

    Just like the last time I tested Copilot Vision and Voice Mode, I made a list of all the prompts in Microsoft’s ad and I’m checking them twice. Or as many times as I can stomach before hitting the nog.

    In the new ad, Copilot offers to help a homeowner make their smart home more festive when they prompt it, “Show me how to sync my holiday lights to my music.” The user clicks through their cloud-connected smart lighting controls on a website called Relecloud as Copilot says, “Let’s walk through it together.” The ad jump-cuts to the home lights pulsing to that classic Christmas song “A-Punk” by Vampire Weekend.

    Relecloud is not a well-known smart home company like Philips Hue or Govee. In fact, it’s not a real business at all. It’s one of the fictional companies Microsoft uses in published case studies (see also: Contoso). I’m inclined to think its use here points to all these advertised Copilot actions being simulated, but a Microsoft rep insists that’s not the case. Nicci Trovinger, general manager of Windows marketing, tells The Verge, “All Copilot responses are actual responses Copilot gave to the scenarios shown and questions asked at a point in time. Responses were shortened for brevity to fit the length of the creative spot, in line with standard advertising practices.”

    I tried this test with Copilot in two ways: one using a still image of the lighting interface from the ad, and another with the Philips Hue Sync app. Copilot made its best guess as to where I should click in the image from the ad, highlighting a “Sync Mode” drop-down menu with its own onscreen cursor, but it struggled to take me much further. It often told me it highlighted something when it didn’t, and it hallucinated a green “Apply” button that was actually just the color preset for green lighting.

    Copilot’s answers were about as confusing when I presented a fully configured app for my Philips Hue lights. It identified the Hue Sync app, and at first told me, correctly, to click on the Music tab and the “Start light sync” button. But then it hallucinated buttons that weren’t there, pointed me to the Entertainment Zones I had already set up, and kept telling me it had highlighted things on my screen when it hadn’t. Copilot’s cursor highlight feature is useful, but it usually only does it when you ask — and it’s painfully slow to react. It often lingers on your screen well after Copilot’s moved on to other advice.

    A couple other prompts go unanswered in the ad, including “Help me figure out these instructions” and “Convert this recipe on my screen so it feeds 12.”

    “14!” another actor, presumably their partner, interjects.

    We don’t see what’s on screen in these cases, so for the instructions, I took a shot at showing Copilot Ikea’s 2×4 Kallax shelf — a classic with assembly manuals available online. Copilot kept identifying dowels as screws or nails. And it would often detect page numbers as step numbers, making any attempts to follow along even more chaotic.

    Scaling up a recipe for a massive gathering is a common holiday practice in my Italian American family. I tried showing Copilot a recipe for stuffed mushrooms from Sip and Feast. It acknowledged that to go from a serving size of six to 14 would require multiplying each ingredient by about 2.3 times, but it usually only did a couple calculations before expecting me to do the rest or trying to move on to another topic by asking me a question. When it noticed the site had options for scaling up the recipe, it mistook the “2x” and “3x” buttons for plus and minus ones that would let me dial in exactly 14 servings, and kept insisting that’s what those buttons are for. They aren’t. Then, as a last-ditch effort, I asked it to just calculate each ingredient and spell it out for me in a document. Copilot told me it would, and then did nothing.

    The last example in the ad has the homeowner with the smart lights asking, “Can you read the HOA guidelines and make sure I’m not breaking any rules?” On screen is a made-up-looking document titled “HOA Guidelines” and a picture of a giant inflatable reindeer in front of a house, encroaching on the neighboring property. The image also looks AI-generated; Microsoft’s Trovinger confirmed that “Both the reindeer yard decoration photo and the HOA guidelines document were created for the purpose of the ad and modeled after references.”

    Copilot tells the actor in the ad to “adjust the inflatable reindeer so it’s not crossing into the neighbor’s yard.” When I showed Copilot the screenshot of the doc and image from the ad, it could detect the line that “large inflatables cannot cross your property line.” But Copilot only gave me wishy-washy answers about the reindeer being too far over or not. It seemed to speculate that the reindeer might be pushing the boundaries, but often deferred to my judgment.

    There is one more prompt in the ad. It’s jolly old St. Nick himself, asking Copilot why toy production is falling behind. In the ad, Copilot says it’s because the elves have been consuming too much hot cocoa. But maybe it’s because management insists on shoehorning AI into their workflows.

    I have to hand it to Microsoft’s marketing team for including this one, which feels like an admission that the whole ad campaign is selling a fantasy. Believing that Copilot can do what Microsoft says it can — or that any of these AI assistants can — is like believing in Santa Claus.

    Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.

    • Antonio G. Di Benedetto
    • AI

      Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      See All AI

    • Microsoft

      Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      See All Microsoft

    • Report

      Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      See All Report

    • Tech

      Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      See All Tech

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleAI companies are sick of their favorite buzzword — so they’re inventing new ones
    Next Article Kia and Hyundai will spend millions fixing old cars to stop ‘Kia Boyz’ thefts

    Related Posts

    Google Photos is coming to Samsung TVs in 2026

    Google Photos is coming to Samsung TVs in 2026

    December 29, 2025
    LG announces new UltraGear evo gaming monitors with AI upscaling

    LG announces new UltraGear evo gaming monitors with AI upscaling

    December 28, 2025
    Ubisoft shuts down ‘Rainbow Six Siege’ servers following hack

    Ubisoft shuts down ‘Rainbow Six Siege’ servers following hack

    December 28, 2025
    Samsung will debut two new wireless speakers at CES 2026

    Samsung will debut two new wireless speakers at CES 2026

    December 27, 2025
    Pixel 10 phones and Switch 2 games round out this week’s best deals 

    Pixel 10 phones and Switch 2 games round out this week’s best deals 

    December 27, 2025
    Rodeo is an app for making plans with friends you already have

    Rodeo is an app for making plans with friends you already have

    December 26, 2025
    Our Picks
    LG announces new UltraGear evo gaming monitors with AI upscaling

    LG announces new UltraGear evo gaming monitors with AI upscaling

    December 28, 2025
    Ubisoft shuts down ‘Rainbow Six Siege’ servers following hack

    Ubisoft shuts down ‘Rainbow Six Siege’ servers following hack

    December 28, 2025
    Samsung will debut two new wireless speakers at CES 2026

    Samsung will debut two new wireless speakers at CES 2026

    December 27, 2025
    Pixel 10 phones and Switch 2 games round out this week’s best deals 

    Pixel 10 phones and Switch 2 games round out this week’s best deals 

    December 27, 2025
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss
    Rodeo is an app for making plans with friends you already have News

    Rodeo is an app for making plans with friends you already have

    By News RoomDecember 26, 2025

    There are plenty of dating apps out there, and apps that turn your chaos of…

    Framework announces another memory price hike — and it likely won’t be its last

    Framework announces another memory price hike — and it likely won’t be its last

    December 26, 2025
    LG teases a new chore-completing home robot

    LG teases a new chore-completing home robot

    December 26, 2025
    Google is letting some people change their @gmail address

    Google is letting some people change their @gmail address

    December 26, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of use
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    © 2025 Technology Mag. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.