You can now trigger Flow buttons right from the Flow web portal. When looking at your list of flows, simply select the “…” menu and choose the Run now command. This week, we are also adding support for five new services, including Oracle Database.
Environment administrators can now view the full list of all the flows inside a given environment, as well as enable, disable or delete flows. We also are adding two new services, bringing the total to more than 100 different services you can connect to.
Azure cognitive services language understanding intelligent service (LUIS) lets you understand language contextually, so your apps communicate with people in the way they speak. With Flow and LUIS integration, you can design your Flow to execute a set of actions when the desired intent is detected.
We five new services in the last week: Azure Data Lake, Bitbucket, Eventbrite, Infusionsoft and Pipedrive. In the flow designer it’s now possible to use authentication with custom HTTP endpoints, and to parse JSON objects returned from APIs. Finally, we added more options for filtering flow runs.
Featuring a guest post from Ryan Schouten, who is going to show you how you can post a messages to your Microsoft Team channel using a simple flow.
Today we are announcing the preview of Team flows. Team flows make it possible for multiple people to own and manage a flow together, and, if someone leaves an organization, the flows they created can continue to run. Your organization’s custom APIs can be shared along with your Team flows as well.
See how to use the new integration between Microsoft Flow and Power BI to stream data directly into a Power BI dashboard from a flow. In this example we will demonstrate displaying real-time weather data on a Power BI dashboard.
Do you have a question for the Microsoft Flow Team? Get your answers at today’s Flow Ask Microsoft Anything (AMA) event on the Flow Community!