The AI revolution: Supercharging low-code with the Power Platform community
CoPilot continues to advance in the Power Platform, making creating of automation quicker and simpler.
Continue reading →CoPilot continues to advance in the Power Platform, making creating of automation quicker and simpler.
Continue reading →Microsoft just released last month the 2023 Release Plan Wave 2 for Power Platform, which details updates coming between October 2023 and March 2024.
Continue reading →I first posted about this a month or so ago. This is the future of publicly no code development. Simply make a statement and AI build a template for you. By Simon Bisson – Microsoft has started to bring some of these … Continue reading →
Microsoft’s newest component for its low-code Power Platform is called Power Pages, for creating business-centric web sites. Power Pages debuted as a preview in May, adding a web site tool to the other low-code components of the Power Platform: Power BI (Business Intelligence), Power … Continue reading →
Power Platform is the future. As Microsoft continues to neglect any other workflow technology, the low code/no code capability of the Power Platform stands as a reasonable replacement. Including the expansion of Power Automate to include RPA attended and unattended. … Continue reading →
Something new in the Power Platform to do more with Excel. Ah, yes please. The Low Code/No Code world is getting ever larger. By Mary Jo Foley – Microsoft is continuing to try to make its Power Platform collection of low-code tools easier … Continue reading →
From my perspective, Excel remains the single most important tool in data analysis and manipulation. While it may not always be the final resting place Whether it is data integrations or merging two disparate systems into one, Excel is indispensable. … Continue reading →
By Simon Bisson – Microsoft’s Power Platform has become a significant part of its developer offering during the past few years. Perhaps best thought of as the modern equivalent of the 1990s client-server applications and tools like the original Visual Basic, … Continue reading →
Adrian Bridgwater – Microsoft has always had to straddle an arguably difficult position in the software trade. The company has always needed to appear technically intricate, granular and powerful in the eyes of hard-core software developers. At the same time, the … Continue reading →