Microsoft Fabric Updates Blog

Microsoft Fabric July 2024 Update

Welcome to the July 2024 update. Here are a few, select highlights of the many we have for Fabric. Creating and managing Git branches & connected workspaces with Git integration just got with the latest enhancements to Fabric Git integration. You now have the capability to perform restore-in-place of a warehouse in Microsoft Fabric through … Continue reading “Microsoft Fabric July 2024 Update”

Announcing Fabric API for GraphQL pricing

During Microsoft Build, in May 2024, we announced the worldwide public preview of API for GraphQL in Microsoft Fabric. With the preview, data engineers and scientists can create a GraphQL data API to connect to different Fabric data sources in seconds, use the APIs in their workflows, or share the API endpoints with app development … Continue reading “Announcing Fabric API for GraphQL pricing”

Microsoft Fabric June 2024 Update

Welcome to the June 2024 update. Here are a few, select highlights of the many we have for Fabric. Fabric Spark connector for Fabric Data Warehouse in Spark runtime is now available. Query activity, a one-stop view of your running and completed SQL queries for workspace admins is being announced. You can now run queries … Continue reading “Microsoft Fabric June 2024 Update”

Introducing Capacity Pools for Data Engineering and Data Science in Microsoft Fabric

We are excited to announce the Capacity Pools for Data Engineering and Data Science in Microsoft Fabric. As part of the Data Engineering and Science settings in the Admin portal, capacity administrators can create custom pools based on their workload requirements. Optimizing Cloud Spend and Managing Compute Resources In enterprise environments, managing cloud spending and … Continue reading “Introducing Capacity Pools for Data Engineering and Data Science in Microsoft Fabric”

Microsoft Fabric Lifecycle Management: Getting started with development in isolation using a Private Workspace

When we talk about Microsoft Fabric workspace collaboration, a common scenario is developers and their teams using a shared workspace environment, which means they have access to “live items”. A change made directly within a workspace would override and affect all other developers or users utilizing that workspace. This is where git becomes increasingly important … Continue reading “Microsoft Fabric Lifecycle Management: Getting started with development in isolation using a Private Workspace”