This post has been updated on June 15, 2020; for the most up-to-date information on Dynamics 365 offers, see Microsoft offers. Over the past weeks, Microsoft has mobilized global teams to support communities and organizations affected by the COVID-19 crisis.
As organizations respond to the ongoing, unprecedented situation and grapple with disruptions across their workforce due to the evolving global health crisis, we want to share the steps we’re taking to help ensure our customers’ business continuity with Microsoft Dynamics 365 and Microsoft Power Platform.
Today, we published the 2020 release wave 1 plans for Dynamics 365 and Microsoft Power Platform, a compilation of new capabilities that will be released between April and September 2020. The new features and enhancements demonstrate our continued investment to power digital transformation for our customers and partners.
In October 2018, we announced the Microsoft Higher Education Accelerator, enabling ISVs and other solution providers to quickly build industry vertical solutions tailored for higher education. Since then, we have updated the accelerator with new scenarios to help institutions transform how they engage with students and their constituents and improve student outcomes.
Key dates for the upcoming release wave As the business environment rapidly changes, we’re dedicated to proactively delivering new capabilities to enable our customers and partners to drive toward strong business outcomes. We deliver these capabilities through two release waves per year.
No two organizations are alike, and neither are the solutions needed to achieve meaningful business results. The one common challenge for every organization, however, is the need to unlock the potential of data to proactively guide the right business outcomes.
2019 release wave 2 launches with new applications and hundreds of capabilities across Dynamics 365 and the Power Platform. Today marks the general availability of more than 400 new feature updates and capabilities across Dynamics 365 and the Power Platform.
Three previous blog posts (post 1, post 2, post 3) described how we can extract and process data from Business Central using Power Platform Dataflows. In this fourth blog post, we show the final result in a short video. Enjoy!
This is the third post in a blog series about how you can use Power Platform Dataflows to get data out of Business Central in a form where it can be accessed by other applications. The first post covered a basic integration between Power BI and Business Central.
This is the second post in a blog series about how you can use Power Platform Dataflows to get data out of Business Central in a form where it can be accessed by other applications. The first post covered a basic scenario of Power BI connecting to the Business Central’s API.