Microsoft Fabric Updates Blog

Instantly Run and Preview Functions in Microsoft Fabric Eventhouse: No Code Required

If you haven’t already, check out Arun Ulag’s hero blog “FabCon and SQLCon 2026: Unifying databases and Fabric on a single, complete platform” for a complete look at all of our FabCon and SQLCon announcements across both Fabric and our database offerings.  Before, using an Eventhouse function required you to write KQL queries by hand. … Continue reading “Instantly Run and Preview Functions in Microsoft Fabric Eventhouse: No Code Required”

Building real-time, event-driven applications with Database CDC feeds and Fabric Eventstreams DeltaFlow (Preview)

Modern business applications win by reacting immediately, serving recommendations as users interact, alerting teams when anomalies occur, or updating dashboards the second business events happen. At the heart of these experiences are operational databases, where every insert, update, or delete represents a meaningful event.

Maps in Microsoft Fabric (Generally Available)

When we envisioned Maps in Microsoft Fabric, our goal was to empower any data citizen to analyze data in time and space without any specialized knowledge. Introduced in preview at FabCon Europe 2025, it has since been used by customers across industries creating and sharing map-centric applications. Additional features were added at Ignite 2025, and this week at FabCon Atlanta, Maps in Microsoft Fabric is generally available – along with new capabilities that expand how geospatial data can be modeled, visualized, and operationalized at any scale.

Trusted AI starts with Microsoft Fabric: Unified real-time intelligence and IQ context

Modern businesses operate in environments where conditions change continuously, and many decisions cannot wait hours. Speed alone does not create alignment. Many platforms focus on moving data faster — through streaming pipelines, dashboards, alerts — but without shared context, teams and AI systems interpret signals differently. Insights fragment. Decisions diverge. Modern businesses need more than faster data. They need a unified operational view. To compete, organizations must operate in real time: sensing what is happening, understanding its context, and responding in time to change outcomes across both digital systems and physical environments.