Microsoft Fabric Updates Blog

FabCon and SQLCon 2026: What’s new in Microsoft OneLake

As AI reshapes every industry, one reality is clear: data is no longer just an asset; it is your competitive advantage. The speed of AI innovation demands seamless data access, rapid insight generation, and the freedom to iterate without friction. Organizations that can unify and activate their data will move faster, build smarter applications, and unlock greater business value.

From unified data to decisive action: advancing supply chain autonomy with Microsoft Fabric and Auger

In a short period of time, Microsoft Fabric has emerged as one of the fastest growing analytics platforms in the industry, unifying data engineering, analytics, governance, and AI into a single, integrated experience. For many organizations, Fabric represents a long-awaited shift away from fragmented data estates toward a shared, trusted foundation.

Fabric March 2026 Feature Summary

Welcome to the Fabric March 2026 Feature Summary—and welcome to FabCon! As we kick off FabCon, this update captures the momentum we’re seeing across the Fabric platform and the conversations happening with customers and partners right now. March brings a wide range of enhancements across governance, data engineering, real-time intelligence, data science, extensibility, and AI—all … Continue reading “Fabric March 2026 Feature Summary”

Empowering admins and developers with a Fabric platform ready for any project

AI is rapidly changing how we create, use, and trust data. This shift places new, simultaneous demands on two critical groups. Developers are being asked to build production‑grade, data‑powered applications with the same rigor, automation, and observability expected of modern software systems. Administrators, meanwhile, must scale governance, security, and capacity to support explosive growth in users, data assets, and AI‑driven workloads without slowing innovation.

Operationalizing Agentic Applications with Microsoft Fabric

Agentic apps are moving quickly from prototypes to real workloads. But once you go beyond a proof of concept (POC), the hard part isn’t getting an agent to respond; it’s knowing what the agent did, whether it was safe and correct, and how it’s impacting the business. Let’s explore what it takes to operationalize agentic … Continue reading “Operationalizing Agentic Applications with Microsoft Fabric”