Deployment pipelines – A customized pipeline is finally here!
You asked, we deliver! The option to create a customized pipeline of 2-10 stages is now available. Check it out!
» Read moreYou asked, we deliver! The option to create a customized pipeline of 2-10 stages is now available. Check it out!
» Read moreThe foundation of centralized connection management is granular access control. Power BI always enforces granular access control for shareable cloud connections (SCCs). For all other data connection types, it can be enabled at the tenant, workspace, and dataset level.
» Read moreThe model view now has even more to offer! We are excited to share the public preview of the Model explorer in the model view of Power BI Desktop.
» Read moreWe have some very exciting news to share with you today! We are thrilled to announce that we have just launched the public preview of Direct Lake mode for Power BI datasets in Fabric! Fabric is taking a bold bet on open data formats in OneLake.
» Read moreExclusive opportunity for Women interested in Power BI, led by female trainers in select countries. Register for a free, hands-on workshop where you will learn how to build a Dashboard in a Day! Learn more here – https://aka.ms/DIAD4Women
» Read morePower BI OneDrive and SharePoint integration enabling by default roll out has started
» Read moreEnhance viewing capabilities for Power BI Report Server in the September 2023 release.
» Read moreWelcome to September! Here is the September 2023 on-premises data gateway release (version 3000.190.17).
» Read moreWelcome to the September 2023 update. We’ve got some updates to editing you data models, row -level security, and a reminder to update your .NET Framework version for Desktop!
» Read moreShared devices are company-owned devices that are shared between employees, often frontline workers, across tasks, shifts, or locations. Most mobile apps, however, are designed for single users, and optimize their experience for use by a single user, with single sign on (SSO) across applications and keeping users signed in on their device. This behavior isn’t suitable for devices that are shared by multiple users. In the case of shared devices, employees expect to pick a device from the pool, “make it theirs” for the duration of their shift, and then to be able, at the end of their shift, to sign out from the device globally and have all their personal and company information removed so they can return the device to the pool. This is exactly what Azure AD’s shared device mode enables.
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