Microsoft says everyone will be a boss in the future – of AI employees

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Microsoft has good news for anyone with corner office ambitions.In the future we’re all going to be bosses – of AI employees.The tech company is predicting the rise of a new kind of business, called a “frontier firm”, where ultimately a human worker directs autonomous artificial intelligence agents to carry out tasks.Everyone, according to Microsoft, will become an agent boss.“As agents increasingly join the workforce, we’ll see the rise of the agent boss: someone who builds, delegates to and manages agents to amplify their impact and take control of their career in the age of AI,” wrote Jared Spataro, a Microsoft executive, in a blogpost this week.

“From the boardroom to the frontline, every worker will need to think like the CEO of an agent-powered startup.”Microsoft, a leading backer of the ChatGPT developer OpenAI, expects every organisation to be on their way to becoming a frontier firm within the next five years.It said these entities would be “markedly different” from those of today and would be structured around what Microsoft called “on-demand intelligence”, using AI agents to gain instant answers on queries related to an array of internal tasks from compiling sales data to drawing up finance projections.The company said in its annual Work Trend Index report: “These companies scale rapidly, operate with agility, and generate value faster.”It expects the emergence of the AI boss class to take place over three phases: first, every employee will have an AI assistant; then AI agents will join teams as “digital colleagues” taking on specific tasks; and finally humans will set directions for these agents, who go off on “business processes and workflows” with their bosses “checking in as needed”.

Microsoft said AI’s impact on knowledge work – a catch-all term for a range of professions from scientists to academics and lawyers – will go the same way as software development, by evolving from coding assistance to agents carrying out tasks.Using the example of a worker’s role in a supply chain, Microsoft said agents could handle end-to-end logistics while humans guide the system and manage relationships with suppliers.Microsoft has been pushing AI’s deployment in the workplace through autonomous AI agents, or tools that can carry out tasks without human intervention.Last year it announced that early adopters of Microsoft’s Copilot Studio product, which deploys bots, included the blue-chip consulting firm McKinsey, which is using agents to carry out tasks such as scheduling meetings with prospective clients.AI’s impact on the modern workforce is one of the key economic and policy challenges produced by the technology’s rapid advance.

While Microsoft says AI will remove “drudge” work and increase productivity – a measure of economic effectiveness – experts also believe it could result in widespread job losses.This year the UK government-backed International AI Safety report said “many people could lose their current jobs” if AI agents become highly capable.Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionThe International Monetary Fund has estimated 60% of jobs in advanced economies such as the US and UK are exposed to AI, and half of these jobs may be negatively affected as a result.The Tony Blair Institute, which supports widespread introduction of AI across the private and public sectors, has said AI could displace up to 3m private sector jobs in the UK.However, job losses will ultimately number in the low hundreds of thousands because the technology will also produce new jobs, the institute estimates.

Dr Andrew Rogoyski, a director at the Surrey Institute for People-Centred AI at the University of Surrey, said organisations that used AI agents would ultimately be tempted to employ fewer workers,“The temptation will be to use AI workers to displace human effort as companies strive to become more efficient, with lower operational costs,” he said,“The danger of replacing humans with AI, apart from the socio-economic impact, is that we lose the knowledge in people’s heads that sustain companies, create innovative products and build meaningful relationships with customers and suppliers,”
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Best way to eat a chocolate digestive | Brief letters

Anthony Coulson from McVitie’s is missing a trick (Taking the biscuit: for 100 years we’ve been eating chocolate digestives wrong, 24 April). My wife’s family introduced me to the proper way to eat chocolate digestives – in pairs, chocolate to the middle. I have enjoyed them this way for more than 50 years.Henry ClayPetersfield, Hampshire Despite the advice about eating chocolate digestives chocolate side down, I shall continue to eat them with the chocolate side up. It’s easier to keep chocolate from sticking to the fingers

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Rukmini Iyer’s quick and easy recipe for asparagus, pea and lemon orzotto | Quick and easy

This dish manages to be simultaneously spring-like and comforting, thanks to the intense flavour from the pea pesto. Telling you to stir whole peas through orzo feels a bit too much like nursery food, but if you are serving this to small children who are amenable to pesto pasta (mine are not), I’d suggest finely blitzing the pumpkin seeds before adding them to the pesto, because they’re quite large pieces otherwise. Top with seasonal asparagus and this is the perfect dinner to eat outdoors on a warm spring evening.Prep 15 min Cook 15 min Serves 2Sea salt flakes 180g orzo 200g asparagus50ml olive oil, plus 1 tbsp extra for the asparagus180g podded fresh peas, or frozen peas50g pumpkin seeds 50g parmesan, grated (a vegetarian one, if need be)Juice of ½ lemonBring a large pan of well-salted water to a boil, then tip in the orzo and cook for eight minutes, or until cooked through but still a bit al dente. Drain well, and reserve a mugful of the cooking water

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How to make aloo gobi – recipe | Felicity Cloake's Masterclass

Basic but beautiful, and very easy, it’s well worth adding this classic Indian vegetable curry to your regular repertoireDescribed by chef Vivek Singh as “the most common and basic vegetable curry you will find anywhere in India”, aloo gobi (the name means potato cauliflower in Hindi) makes a great vegetable side dish, but it’s also full-flavoured enough to pair with plain rice or flatbreads for a very satisfying (and incidentally vegan) main meal.Prep 20 min Cook 1 hr Serves 4350g waxy potatoes 1 red or yellow onion 1 medium cauliflower 20g fresh root ginger, or 1 tbsp grated ginger4 garlic cloves 400g tin plum tomatoes, or 5 fresh plum or medium tomatoes and 1 tbsp tomato puree2 tsp coriander seeds 4 tbsp neutral oil 1 tsp cumin seeds ½ tsp nigella seeds ½-1 tsp mild chilli powder ½ tsp turmeric 1-4 green finger chillies 1 tsp salt 1 tbsp methi (dried fenugreek leaves)1 tsp garam masala Juice of ½ lime 1 small bunch fresh corianderChop the potatoes (common waxy varieties, often sold as salad potatoes in the UK, include charlotte, nicola, anya and jersey royals) into roughly 2½cm dice; there’s no need to peel them, but if they’re a bit dirty, give them a good scrub first.Peel and finely slice the onion (I like the sweetness of red in this dish, but brown will work fine, too).Cut any leaves off the cauliflower, saving those that are in good shape to add to the dish later (or use them in a soup or stir-fry, if you prefer).Trim off and discard the base of the stalk, divide the top into bite-sized florets and cut the remaining stalk into chunks about the same size as the potatoes

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Meghan made one-pot pasta a trend – but is it any good? Seven all-in-one recipes tested

The duchess’s skillet spaghetti outraged purists, but there’s no shortage of single-pot pasta dishes to try. Here are some that make the grade, and others that most certainly don’tSadly, we cannot return to a more innocent age before the first episode of Meghan, Duchess of Sussex’s Netflix cookery show, with its recipe for one-pan pasta. This was a time when typing the words “skillet spaghetti controversy” into Google produced no significant matches. Now those three words are inextricably linked.To recap: Meghan piled uncooked spaghetti and other raw ingredients into a shallow pan, poured boiling water from a kettle over them and cooked them with a lid on

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The Lavery, London SW7: ‘One of London’s loveliest new places to eat’ – restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants

One of the main challenges of writing a weekly restaurant column is finding new ways (and at least 11 times a year) to describe the experience of eating Mediterranean small plates in a room painted in Little Greene’s Silent White. Other food – and, indeed, paint colours – are available, but in recent years, whenever you cast an eye over some hot, hip new place, you need to brace yourself for polenta, coco beans, galettes and neutral furnishing. The Lavery, just opposite the Natural History Museum in South Kensington, is by no small margin the new emperor of this style of cooking and decor, with a former River Cafe, Petersham Nurseries and Toklas chef, Yohei Furuhashi, serving up gnocchi with fresh peas on the upper floors of a dreamily restored, Grade II-listed Georgian townhouse.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link

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Preserving English eccentricity: 20 years of the World Marmalade Awards

What could unite octogenarian Cumbrian farmers, diplomats from Japan, Spain and Australia, and Paddington Bear?The answer, of course, is marmalade. Or, more specifically, the World Marmalade Awards.With a flock of spray-painted orange sheep, a giant red squirrel and Paddington wandering among the marmalade aficionados (many of whom are also dressed in orange), and a choir of schoolchildren performing a specially commissioned marmalade song, the event held at Dalemain Mansion near Penrith is something of a showcase of English eccentricity.The event’s founder, Jane Hasell-McCosh, set up the awards in 2005, “mainly because we’d had foot and mouth and the whole county had really suffered from it”, she said, and also because “I love marmalade and I was trying to think of a way of getting people to come to Cumbria”.It began as a local competition, with Hasell-McCosh, who lives in Dalemain, convincing people to hand over jars of their marmalade