This week, to round off the year, we try something different. I wanted to throw a shout out to all the community heroes out there, who also help make the most of Microsoft Fabric, through the use of Microsoft Power Platform (and vice versa).

Also, I wanted to highlight some of their contributions, and hopefully give you all a list of resources to peruse.

First thing first. Huge shout out to some of the community & Microsoft titans mentioned in this post, in no particular order: Laura Graham-Brown, Scott Sewell, Kristian Bubalo, Pat Mahoney, Jason Davidson, Chris Webb & Tim Weinzapfel.

Now without further ado…

Power Automate

Power Apps

Power Pages

Dataverse

Also check out these other blogs:

Bulk Write-Back w. Translytical Task Flows in Microsoft Fabric / Power BI: Writing a single value back to multiple records at the same time

Introduction On this blog we’ve previously covered quite a few areas of Translytical Task Flows: Having presented a few sessions on Translytical Task Flows at conferences in the past moths, there is one major recurring question: How do you write-back multiple records at once? If you ask me, the questions of bulk write-back/writing back multiple…

Fabric Quick Tips – Pushing transformation upstream with Self Service Views and Tables in Visual Queries for Lakehouses/Warehouses/SQL DB

Introduction Recently, I’ve experienced a huge influx in requests from Microsoft Fabric customers wanting a good way for user’s to push data transformation upstream, following Roche’s Maxim: Data should be transformed as far upstream as possible, and as far downstream as necessary. To elaborate slightly, there are tons of Power BI Semantic Models out there…

Organizing your Microsoft Fabric Data Platform: Tags and Task Flows

Introduction We’ve arrived at the final level of detail in our series on Organizing your Microsoft Fabric Data Platform. So far we’ve covered, from broadest to narrowest scope: This time we go all the way down to the Item level on our platform, and describe strategies for labeling and categorising individual items by using Tags…

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One response to “Link Collection: Enhancing Microsoft Fabric with Microsoft Power Platform”

  1. Thank you very much! Really made my day seeing my blog is recognized out there 🙂

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