Worth Knowing: February 13, 2026

Worth Knowing: February 13, 2026
Three stories caught our attention today: Microsoft's big upgrade for office workers, a new way to manage your health data in ChatGPT, and why "AI Agents" are the new buzzword at work.
AI Is About to Take Over Your Spreadsheet
TL;DR: Microsoft is rolling out "Agent Mode" for Copilot, allowing the AI to handle complex, multi-step tasks in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint without constant hand-holding.

For a while now, AI chatbots have been like eager interns who can only do one thing at a time. You ask a question, they give an answer. But with the new "Agent Mode" launching this month, Microsoft 365 Copilot is getting a promotion.
Instead of just answering questions, these new "agents" can work alongside you to complete entire projects. In Excel, an agent can now analyze data, create charts, and format a report with a single prompt. In PowerPoint, it can build a slide deck from your Word notes, apply your company's branding, and even rewrite bullet points to be punchier. It's less "chatting with a bot" and more "assigning a task to a colleague."
These agents are also getting "independent"—meaning they can check their own work, plan out steps, and use other apps to get the job done.
What This Means for You
If your company uses Microsoft 365 Copilot, the "drudge work" of formatting slides and crunching numbers is about to get much faster. You can stop fighting with Excel formulas and start focusing on what the data actually means.
Source: Microsoft 365 Copilot Agent Mode details by Microsoft
Your Next Doctor's Appointment Might Start in ChatGPT
TL;DR: OpenAI has launched "ChatGPT Health," a dedicated, secure platform for syncing your medical records and wellness data directly into the chat interface.

Managing health data is usually a nightmare of scattered portals and forgotten passwords. OpenAI is trying to fix that with a new "Health" section in ChatGPT. This feature allows you to securely connect your medical records (from doctors and hospitals) and sync data from wearables like your Apple Watch or Fitbit.
Once connected, you can ask plain-English questions about your own health data. For example, "Based on my last blood test, is my cholesterol trending up or down?" or "Help me prepare a list of questions for my cardiologist based on these symptoms."
OpenAI emphasizes that this data is encrypted, private, and—crucially—not used to train their AI models. It's designed to be a personal health assistant, not a public data grab.
What This Means for You
You finally have a way to make sense of your own medical records without needing a medical degree. It turns a confusing PDF of test results into a conversation you can actually understand.
Source: OpenAI launches ChatGPT Health by Medical Economics
The Rise of the "AI Co-worker"
TL;DR: A flood of new reports and updates from Salesforce, Anthropic, and others shows that "AI Agents" are rapidly moving from experimental toys to essential business tools.

If 2025 was the year of the Chatbot, 2026 is shaping up to be the year of the Agent. We're seeing a major shift in how businesses talk about AI. It's no longer just about generating text; it's about doing work.
Salesforce reported this week that AI agents are becoming the "leading growth tactic" for sales teams, with over half of organizations deploying them to handle research and routine tasks. Meanwhile, Anthropic (the makers of Claude) just hit a $380 billion valuation by focusing heavily on these "enterprise-grade" tools that can navigate complex business workflows.
The common thread? AI is graduating from a tool you use to a teammate you collaborate with.
What This Means for You
Expect your job description to evolve. Instead of doing the repetitive tasks yourself, you'll likely spend more time managing and reviewing the work of AI agents. The skill of the future isn't just "prompt engineering"—it's "AI management."
Source: State of Sales Report by Salesforce
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