Microsoft Fabric Updates Blog

Announcing the Fabric Extensibility Toolkit Contest

We’re launching a new community contest inviting you to build innovative workload concepts that showcase what’s possible with the Fabric Extensibility Toolkit.

The Toolkit gives you full creative range: new UX components, API interactions, Notebook-driven experiences, shortcuts, and even early explorations of new item types. Getting started often takes under an hour, and great concepts can take shape over a weekend.

Contest Timeline

  • Opens: December 16, 2025
  • Closes: February 13, 2026
  • Winners Announced: February 20, 2026

This contest is about ideasnot production-ready workloads. Show the concept clearly, however you prefer: a lightweight prototype, mocked UX flow, short demo video, or simple GitHub scaffolding.

Top entries will be showcased on the Fabric Community Blog and promoted across social channelsand the winning creator earns a free pass to FabCon Atlanta!

Find full details, judging criteria, and submission requirements on the Fabric Community Site.

Related blog posts

Announcing the Fabric Extensibility Toolkit Contest

January 5, 2026 by Yael Biss

We want to update on a strategic evolution in how you can access and utilize security insights within Microsoft Fabric! The powerful reports you’ve relied on in the Microsoft Purview Hub are officially transitioning and being significantly enhanced within the new Admin Report in the Govern tab of the OneLake Catalog, as was announced at … Continue reading “Explore Fabric Security insights in the OneLake catalog – Govern tab”

December 18, 2025 by Yaron Pri Gal

Following Azure DevOps Service Principal & Cross Tenant Support (Generally Available) announcement for service principal and cross-tenant support – Microsoft Fabric Git Integration with Azure DevOps (ADO), this blog post serves as a guide to connecting Fabric workspaces to Azure DevOps repositories using service principal. Fabric Git Integration is the foundation for organizations implementing fully … Continue reading “How to Connect Microsoft Fabric to Azure DevOps Using Service Principal”