The LinkedIn connector for Flow enables you to amplify your content’s reach by sharing it with the right audience of professionals. You can share an article on the behalf of your company or from your individual profile.
At Microsoft Ignite 2017 we have many great announcements: there are new SharePoint integrations, including “In-the-box” send for review flows. Microsoft Flow is now integrated in Dynamics 365 for Customer Engagement.
The SQL Database Connector in Logic Apps and Flow is one of the most popular connector, and we have just added a highly requested feature – triggers. Now, you can kick off your Flow or Logic Apps whenever a row is inserted or modified in a SQL Azure Database table.
In the past weeks we have released several new features in the Microsoft Flow experience: you can download flow run history to open in Excel, build recurring schedules to trigger your flows, (for example, only trigger on weekdays), and get IntelliSense as you enter in expressions.
Microsoft Ignite kicks off at Orlando next week. We have a number of sessions about Microsoft Flow, where we will showcase new capabilities, do deep dives into advanced topics, and share customer stories. If you are attending Ignite, we’d love to meet you to get your feedback and answer any questions.
When you send an email marked as high importance, you want to get a prompt response. However, sometimes your co-workers may not respond quickly. This flow will remind you four hours after you send an email marked as High Importance, if, and only if, nobody responds to it. Try it now!
At the end of August, the Microsoft Flow Team hosted its second Ask Microsoft Anything community event — and it was a huge success! During the Q&A hour, the Flow Team answered over 100 questions asked by our community members. The AMA discussion produced over 20 solutions written by members of the Flow Team.
In a previous blog, we saw how the Microsoft Flow team tracks Flow portal and backend deployments as they get deployed across regions.
Come share your experiences and business needs with the Microsoft Flow and PowerApps product teams, and hear about what’s on our roadmap at this roundtable. Fill out this survey to participate.
Last week we created a Flow to track and store survey data with Microsoft Forms, and we asked you to help by answering our questions. This week we’re taking a look at your responses and using Flow to run sentiment analysis on the results using the free Microsoft Cognitive Services sentiment API.
It’s time for another Flow of the Week, and this time we’re looking at how to take data from Microsoft Forms, store it, share it with Power BI for reporting, and send an automated response to the people who participated.