This week Microsoft Flow added a new capability to buttons: : Flow buttons can now receive user inputs at run time. Thanks to this new functionality, buttons can now serve you in many more business use cases throughout the day.
Use the scheduling capabilities of Microsoft Flow to have schedule posts to happen in the near future. In this Flow of the Week we will show how you can save scheduled tweets to a SharePoint list and have them posted to Twitter exactly when you want. See the template here.
We are pleased to announce the first Ask Microsoft Anything (AMA) on the Microsoft Flow Community! This is your opportunity to ask questions and share feedback directly with the Flow product team. The AMA will take place in the Flow Community AMA board on Thursday, February 2, 2017 from 10:00am to 11:00am PST.
Microsoft Flow has added so many new services (now 90) that it could be hard to find the trigger or action you want. To help, we added browsing by service when you add a trigger or action — so you can see all the actions for each service.
Build a flow in a couple minutes that handles responses to a Typeform form by sending out an email and adding an item to SharePoint list.
This week Microsoft Flow added the ability to control the execution of the flow once it’s started running. For example, if you have a flow that has gotten stuck, you can cancel the run.
Automate moderation of Disqus channels and comments in minutes using this easy to setup template.
Join Merwan Hade in our next webinar as he walks through SharePoint integration, administration, and all round best practices for using Microsoft Flow, at Wednesday, January 11, 2017, 10 a.m. PT. Register now.
Do you work on several projects? From several sites? Now you can easily keep track of your work hours and work locations, at the tap of a button.