Microsoft Fabric Updates Blog

Bring your on-premises data to OneLake!

Microsoft OneLake is a unified data lake for all of your organization’s data. With OneLake shortcuts, you can reference data in different locations and have that data logically represented within OneLake, with no data movement or duplication. Data across Azure, Amazon Web Services, and Google Cloud Platform can coexist in the same virtual lake. With … Continue reading “Bring your on-premises data to OneLake!”

Unleashing the power of data for analytics applications with the new Microsoft Fabric API for GraphQL

Microsoft Fabric is an all-in-one SaaS analytics platform for enterprises that covers everything from data movement to data science, Real-Time Analytics, and business intelligence. It offers a comprehensive suite of services, including data lake, data engineering, data science, data integration, and more, all in one place. Fabric exposes different REST APIs that let you automate … Continue reading “Unleashing the power of data for analytics applications with the new Microsoft Fabric API for GraphQL”

Profiling Microsoft Fabric Spark Notebooks with Sparklens

Problem Statement: You are a data engineer developing Spark notebooks using Microsoft Fabric. You are having performance issues and you want to know if your spark code is running efficiently. You also want to know if increasing the resources would improve its performance. Discussion: In this blog, you will learn how to leverage Sparklens, an … Continue reading “Profiling Microsoft Fabric Spark Notebooks with Sparklens”

Announcing the public preview of task flows in Microsoft Fabric

Leverage the power of task flows to design and build your data solutions and manage workspace items in Microsoft Fabric. We’re thrilled to announce that the task flows feature is now in public preview and is enabled for all existing Microsoft Fabric users. Fabric is unifying everything needed to deliver end-to-end data and analytics solutions … Continue reading “Announcing the public preview of task flows in Microsoft Fabric”