Rob, I totally agree, some kind of UI that resembles excel for simple bulk updates would be exactly right. An enhancement to the grid view would seem like a pretty obvious way to implement this.
Project Pro is all well and good, but it lacks one of the key positives of Planner which is a simple interface for task assignees. I have worked in programme/project and line management roles for many years, and I have yet to see a tool that truly spans the needs of PMs, line/resource managers, and assignees. Planner already has many of the key components - a mostly unified database, Gantt & Kanban capability that is good enough for most mid-level projects, and an M365 collaboration interface that assignees are already using. It wouldn’t take much to bridge the remaining gaps - give line managers the ability to control their incoming workload vs capacity, and give programme/project managers the ability to manage tasks across multiple projects. The Hammerhead tool is obviously targeted at the first of these, although it would be better if it was integrated within the main Planner interface rather than having to go via Power Apps. (While I absolutely agree with the principle of a simple basic interface, there are multiple ways to make advanced features easily accessible to power users without adding clutter.) There are several comments here eg from AlexNak and JacobW620 on very similar lines - the Planner direction two years ago was looking very promising, but in the past year it seems to have got stuck in a Copilot morass.
On Copilot, there clearly is a lot of ultimate potential, but I would absolutely agree that in the near/medium term it should focus on reliably automating simple functions rather than some speculative nirvana. A request like “build me a project plan” is a nonsense right now, but requests like “assign all server build tasks to John”, “check for any resource risks in the next 3 months”, or “copy the integration section from my last project” are much more useful and achievable. Unfortunately right now Copilot seems to be trying to run before it can walk. Project managers work to increase predictability and reduce risk, so if Copilot introduces additional uncertainty or variability it is going in completely the wrong direction. I’m afraid to say it but the Project Manager agent as it stands is really just a marketing demonstration, not a professional tool. I don’t know whether the Planner development team is actually listening to feedback from real-world project or resource managers, but right now it appears as if the development direction is being set according to distant management mandates and marketing hype, rather than people who will ultimately use the tool (or not). I really hope the feedback here does end up somewhere meaningful, looking across multiple message boards on this topic there seem to be plenty of experienced people with opinions similar to what I have expressed, and it would be a pity if Planner misses the opportunity that is clearly within its grasp.NancyatMSFT are all the comments in this feedback stream actually going anywhere, they seem pretty consistent?