►
From YouTube: Microsoft Graph community call-June 2020
Description
In June’s call, hosted by Jeremy Thake, he shared a Microsoft Build 2020 Recap along with a series of available Microsoft Graph resources. Then Bettirose Ngugi, Microsoft Graph PM shared updates and demos for Graph Explorer.
Resources
Microsoft Graph website https://graph.microsoft.com
Build 2020 on-demand videos https://aka.ms/AA8m0yh
Graph Explorer https://aka.ms/AA8m0yf
Stay connected
Twitter https://twitter.com/microsoft365dev
YouTube https://aka.ms/M365DevYouTube
Blogs https://aka.ms/M365DevBlog
A
Welcome
to
the
June,
2nd
honey
call
we're
actually
doing
a
quick
build
recap
on
this.
One
I
had
a
lot
of
feedback
that,
although
build
was
2
weeks
ago
now,
not
everyone
could
make
the
sessions
because
they
were
busy
at
work
or
had
other
commitments,
and
people
wanted
to
know
how
the
best
way
was
to
tap
into
all
that
amazing
content
that
was
presented,
live
but
also
available
on
demand.
So
I'm
gonna,
walk
through
and
highlight
the
best
bits
of
that
and
to
just
point
out
where
you
can
go.
A
Watch
will
be
on
demand
videos
to
make
that
the
most
easiest
few
to
kind
of
get
up
to
speed.
We
don't
think
it
was
announced
not
just
from
a
Microsoft
graph
perspective
and
also
from
a
Microsoft
365
in
general
perspective
as
well
so
I'm
Jeremy,
thick
I've,
been
hosting
the
community
call
for
a
few
years
now
and
I
have
with
me
buddy
Rose
Betty.
Do
you
want
to
introduce
yourself.
B
A
So
I
just
want
to
do
a
quick
bit
of
build
recap,
and
the
easiest
way
to
do
this
is
to
essentially
share
my
actual
spring,
but
in
the
slide
deck
I've
put
some
key
slides
just
to
highlight
you
know
the
most
common
links,
so
the
first
one
that
we've
got
here
is
just
the
main
Microsoft
graph
website.
So
the
easiest
way
to
get
there
is
well
this
year.
I'll.
If
you
can
remember
it,
but
also
graph
Microsoft
comm
is
definitely
the
best
way
to
get
there.
A
A
The
whole
m36
5
is
that
you
actually
go
to
this
vlog
rather
than
the
than
the
graph
one,
because
you'll
get
our
news
as
well
as
all
the
other
news
as
well,
which
I
think
for
most
M
365
developers.
You
know
you're
not
just
interested
in
our
API
you're
interested
in
building
on
our
platform,
and
so
M
365
makes
most
sense.
A
Go
back
to
the
Microsoft
graph
block
here,
the
key
blog
post
that
we
write
for
each
major
event
is
authored
and
penned
by
Ben
summers,
who's
on
the
call
and
for
build.
It
was
the
API
to
your
organization,
Microsoft
graphic
build,
and
so
that
is
definitely
solid.
Reading
there
are
RSS
feeds,
blog
I,
see
someone
asking
there
and
I
think.
If
you
scroll
down
the
bottom,
you
can
see
them
on
on
this
RSS
feed.
A
So
when
you
grab
these,
if
you
go
put
those
into
feedly,
they
will
work
or
you
can
kind
of
add
Microsoft
flow
and
so
forth.
That
was
something
I
asked
for
really
really
early
on.
So
thank
you
for
asking
for
that.
It
proves
that
the
value
of
the
project
was
here,
and
so,
as
part
of
this
announcement,
we
kind
of
called
out
the
key
topic
areas
as
well
as
all
the
new
api's
we've
announced,
and
you
can
kind
of
click
through
and
link
to
all
these
things
and
Docs.
A
Now
I
will
say:
I
have
a
personal
favorite,
which
I
know
you
know
it's
hard
to
do
having
a
favorite
child,
but
my
favorite
video
for
Micah
365
Microsoft
graph,
is
the
what's
new
with
Microsoft
graph
video
missed
30
minutes,
and
it
encapsulates
a
lot
of
what
was
shown
in
the
blog
with
demos
of
those
API.
So
if
you
want
one,
video
might
highly
recommend
checking
that
particular.
What's
new
video
out
and
I
think
I
even
have
it
Auto
muted
so
that
doesn't
destroy
this
presentation.
A
No
I
definitely
can't
win
that
war.
Job
and
so
I
would
really
encourage
you
to
go
check
out
those
videos
to
get
completely
up-to-date.
What's
going
on
inside
of
Microsoft
graph
there's
some
I've
watched
a
lot
of
these
actually
in
in
the
downtime
and
they're
really
kind
of
quick
and
succinct
you'll
see
a
lot
of
them
are
15
minutes,
so
you
can
really
just
snack,
consume
them
during
lunch
or
as
you're
ramping
up
in
the
mornings.
A
In
addition
to
that,
the
sessions
Koehler
and
Beth
and
I
knew
Connor
and
Bedford
from
the
Microsoft
graph
toolkit
team.
They
actually
helped
build
an
application
called
the
moderator
app
inside
of
Microsoft
teams
that
heavily
uses
the
Microsoft
graph,
and
this
show
we
actually
recorded
over
three
hours
on
twitch
I'd
love
any
feedback
on
those
that
attended
that
or
consume
this
on
demand
or
whatever.
You
think
this
was
a
good
format
for
learning.
We
are
interested
in
kind
of
doing
this
again
in
the
future.
A
Obviously,
there's
a
bit
of
prep
time
in
terms
of
building
the
app
but
first
and
then
like
basically
thrashing
the
app
and
rebuilding
it
from
scratch
and
explaining
all
those
steps
as
we
go
through
with
the
on-demand.
It's
actually
really
nice,
because
we've
broken
it
up
into
the
separate
areas
of
those
three
hours.
A
So
if
you
know,
if
you're
already
comfortable
with
Azure
ad
and
you're
okay
with
Mike
sort
of
talk
it,
you
can
kind
of
jump
in
and
on
the
video
for
and
get
going
straight
away,
which
is
awesome
so
definitely
check
out
those
videos.
I
will
encourage
you
that
if
you
go
back
to
that,
Mike
Rosario
and
you'll
get
all
the
alerts
for
all
the
new
videos
that
come
through.
There
are
a
ton
of
videos
on
development
here
from
team
SharePoint
Graf
office.
Adding
this
is
where
all
the
community
call
recordings
go:
identity,
platform,
windows,
dev.
A
This
is
definitely
the
best
place
to
go
to
kind
of
keep
up
with
everything.
That's
happening
in
M,
365,
I
love
this,
because
I
have
my
TV
at
home
with
my
Apple
TV
and
I
can
just
open
the
YouTube
app
and
just
pick
a
video
and
have
that
running,
while
I'm,
cooking
and
so
forth,
which
drives
my
wife
nuts.
So
that's
that
now
a
big
shout
out
to
Microsoft
graph
talk
it.
They
have
a
new
series
called
the
Microsoft
graph
lap
around
Microsoft
graph
toolkit
and
they're
on
day
8.
A
As
of
yesterday
on
June
1st
this
tool,
this
blog
series
was
inspired
by
the
series
that
Brian
jacket
drove,
which
was
the
30
days
of
graph
series,
was
done
over
18
months
ago
now
and
Brian
is
now
on
our
team
and
in
this
call
Brian
Weber
working
with
us
on
partnering
customer
success.
So
thank
you
for
joining
the
team
and
thanks
where
you
work
on
that
series.
Brother
Brian.
So
that's
awesome
and
yeah
I'd
encourage
you.
A
If
you
haven't
read
the
30
days
of
graph,
do
that
and
then,
if
you're
interested
in
Microsoft
graph
talk
it,
which
we've
had
on
this
humanity
call
quite
a
few
times
now,
this
lap
around
really
introduces
you
to
everything,
that's
happening
in
the
graph
toolkit
and
and
kind
of
steps
you
through
all
the
different
things
you
can
do
to
learn
about
Microsoft
graph
talk
it
too,
and
then.
Lastly,
if
you
go
over
to
github,
what
you'll
see
is
that
we
have
actually
open
source
that
moderator
sample
that
we
built
in
react.
A
It
used
the
new
Microsoft
team's
Visual,
Studio
code
extension
that
was
announced
that
bill
as
well.
So
the
video
showed
you
out.
We
kind
of
like
dinner,
made
a
react
where
that
and
Microsoft
teams
and
then
plugged
in
the
graph
and
got
this
thing
working
into
it.
So
definitely
go
check
that
out.
If
you
have,
if
you
have
time
so
with
that,
I
will
just
jump
back
to
slides,
and
so
you
can
see
in
the
slide
deck
I've
put
the
main
links
in
here.
A
They
are
in
the
chat
window,
which
I
know
will
not
be
on
the
video
recording
and
the
AKS
dev
link
further
show
and
they
get
our
videos
and
the
lap
around
the
Microsoft
graph
toolkit.
So
with
that
I
will
hand
over
to
Betty
Rose
just
in
time,
and
let
you
see
everything
about
the
new
Microsoft
graph,
Explorer
Thank.
B
You
Jamie
hi
everyone,
so
my
name
is
Betty,
but
she
doesn't
go.
Gay
I
am
a
p.m.
based
out
of
Nairobi
Kenya
I
own
Microsoft,
glass
Explorer,
which
is
the
tool
that
we
just
launched.
The
new
version
of
it
and
I
hoped
I
could
take
some
time.
I
could
take
some
time
during
this
call
to
just
show
you
some
of
the
features
that
we
have
created.
B
So,
as
you
can
see,
it's
a
brand
new
look
from
the
UI
and
that's
the
first
thing
we
built
it
using
RIA,
Redux
framework
and
one
of
the
things
we
thought
about
when
you
actually
think
this
is
the
ease
of
getting
things
such
as
permissions,
so
before
the
old
graph
explorer
a
user
needed
to
know
the
chance
that
you
require
to
run
a
query.
But
right
now,
if
you
just
type
in
a
query
over
here,
it's
able
to
show
you
it's
able
to
show
you
the
permissions
that
you
require.
B
But
if
you
actually
know
the
permissions
that
you
are
reading
lead,
you
will
find
a
new.
We
have
implemented
a
new
way
to
see
the
list
of
all
the
permissions,
and
at
least
you
will
find
it
on
these
on
this
tab
over
here,
where
you
can
click
on
select
permissions
and
it
will
open
for
you
all
the
permissions
and
you
can
select
the
ones
you
want
and
consent
to
them.
B
The
second
thing
we
thought
about
is
the
access
token,
and
a
lot
of
users
would
wanted
to
know
or
to
pick
this
token,
to
use
it
in
their
favorite
rest
api
plans,
so
you
can
actually
come
here
and
picture
I
can
copy
it
and
use
it
whenever
you
want
to
use
it.
The
bad
thing
is
we
have
this
tab
here
called
the
adaptive
cards
we
actually
in
the
process
of
adding
more
value
to
this
tab.
B
It
supposed
to
show
you,
like
the
kind
of
cards
that
you
can
get
from
the
adaptive
cards
framework
and
we
are
supposed
to
create
a
new
tab
to
show
with
the
code
we
used
to
show
this.
So
this
is
still
it
on
preview.
At
the
moment,
the
next
one
is
the
code
snippet
and
the
code
snippets,
using
like
some
codes
methods
that
you
can
use
to
write
like,
depending
on
the
query
that
you
have
over
here.
B
We
have
gotten
feedback
from
community,
but
we
also
need
PowerShell
SDK
added
over
yeah,
so
we
are
watching
two
words:
adding
adding
code
snippets
for
partial
as
well
and
also
for
Python,
because
it's
also
an
SDK.
We
are
currently
working
on.
The
next
thing
is
this
stub
here
you
will
see
we
already
have
enabled
change
of
themes.
So
if
you
want
to
see
like
a
duck
theme,
a
light
beam
or
a
high
contrast
theme,
you
will
see.
That
is
also
enabled.
B
We
still
have
a
bit
of
bugs
and
we
have
this
reported
in
your
axe
and
working
on
them
an
example.
If
you
change
the
theme
over
here,
you
will
see
the
access
token.
You
can
see
it,
so
this
is
known
issues
that
you
are
already
currently
working
on
and
if
you
find
any
other
issues,
please
feel
free
to
she
put
them
on
our
github
repo.
We
have
this
history
tab
over
here
and
one
of
the
things
we
took
care
of
his.
B
We
can
actually
download
your
history
and
such
kind
of
things
or,
if
you
wants
to
download
a
specific
history,
you
just
come
here
and
export
it,
and
you
will
get
back
the
history.
You
can
also
view
you
can
delete
and
they've
gotten
feedback
to
work
on
this,
like
when
you
click
over
here.
It's
supposed
to
give
you
the
query
that
you
clicked,
but
when
you
click
on
a
history,
I
tell
you
to
shut.
It
should
actually
actually
like
copy
it
over
here.
B
So
that
is
also
on
the
plan
and
then,
if
you
look
at
the
history,
the
samples
we
are
showing
them
all
of
them
on
this
side.
So
and
then
you
have
this
share
link
button
over
here,
which
was
also
on
that
previous
one.
So
you
can
share
like
the
query.
You
have
any
to
go
with
a
request
head
up
and
request
bodies.
That's
how
Gd
on
your
query.
So
as
I
conclude,
I
would
like
to
invite
everyone.
A
That
Betty
is
interested
in
having
30-minute
calls
directly
with
individuals
to
share
experience
with
how
they
use
graphics
for
themselves
within
in
Microsoft.
But
we
also
wanted
to
open
the
forum
today
and
we
could
use
that
put
your
hands
up
feature
or
using
a
hands
emoticon
in
the
chat
window.
We
can
just
kind
of
ask
people
to
open
up
their
mic,
so
they
can
give
their
feedback
to
to
us
on
this
call
right
now.
D
Yeah
recently
I
use
graph
explorer
on
the
daily
basis
and
I
happen
to
know
there
was
a
new
new
version,
while
I'm
using
it
so
and
the
old
version.
Now
we
could
just
do
the
get
request
is
that
gonna
slowly
go
away
and
I
still
like
the
green
color.
One
I
know
see
short
the
dark,
more
and
and
white.
More,
but
what's
gonna
happen
with
the
old
version,
and
is
it
only
get
requests
on
the
old
version?
D
C
D
No
for
the
first
few
days,
I
was
like
why
can't
I
do
post
request
or
Pat's
request,
but
then,
once
I
figure
switch
to
sign
with
the
new
to
old,
to
new
I,
see
it
that,
oh
okay,
so
it's
it's
a
new
version
and
then
I
see
that
access
token
resource
and
head
up
the
course
code,
even
code
snippets.
So
that's
really
useful
and
then
I'm
looking
forward
for
other
features.
D
I'm
curious
about
I,
quite
often
I,
don't
personally
use
graph
too
much
yes,
I
other
than
being
aware
of
it.
My
customers
I'm
helping
some
of
my
customers
quite
a
bit
and
they
use
the
beta
features.
I
personally
am
curious.
Do
we
have
visibility?
How
long
it
takes
for
beta
features
to
move
from
better
to
release
version?
This
is
a
way
to
know
what
is
the
best
way
to
answer
those
type
of
questions.
C
So
so
that's
a
question.
That's
a
bit
outside
of
the
of
the
focus
point
right
now,
but
to
answer
it,
the
I
guess
the
best
place
to
know
and
be
notified
of
any
progress
of
any
feature
in
manga,
so
graph
will
be
to
go
to
Microsoft
graph
user
voice
calm
and
there
you
have
all
the
ideas
and
suggestions
that
people
have
suggested
with
time
and
the
product
teams
that
work
on
the
different
features
either
of
a
new
API
is
our
platform.
C
Brand
features
are
supposed
to
go
there
and
update
the
different
ideas,
so
not
only
of
the
putting
each
and
every
ID
that
you're
interested
in
will
help
us
prioritize
the
work
internally,
but
it
will
also
notify
you
when
any
progress
is
made,
for
example,
if
something
moved
from
our
own
private
preview
to
beta
and
then
beta
2
v1.
Every
time
an
update
is
made
there
you'll
get
an
email
notification.
C
Another
place
you
could
check
as
well
is
the
Microsoft
365
Roman
and
which
is
where
or
as
well
as
the
change
log
in
the
docs
I
can
see
Jeremy
moving
as
well.
So
the
roadmap
is
where
you'll
see
features.
Not
just
my
customer
features
but
features
at
large
in
Microsoft
365
being
updated
in
terms
of
when
they're
supposed
to
land
in
which
quarter
and
the
change
log
is
where
you
see
all
the
new
changes
that
have
landed
but
have
made
their
way
to
either
beta
or
v1
being
being
listed
out.
C
So
those
are
three
places
where
I
would
go
to
know
when,
where
is
something
at
in
terms
of
delivery,
and
when
it's
going
to
land
and
all
those
kind
of
things
and
to
answer
a
question
about
how
long
does
it
makes
me
go
from
beta
to
v1?
It
really
depends
from
feature
to
feature
as
we
collect
feedback,
we
might
see
that
something
needs
more
or
less
rework
and
anticipated.
F
And
let
me
just
let
me
just
add
really
quickly
to
that
Vincent.
This
is
Ben.
Summers
is
that
we're
actually
working
a
lot
right
now
on
making
sure
that
the
course
off
365
roadmap,
that
Vincent's
showing
here
is
is
is
a
location
that
reflects
sort
of
the
true
plan
of
record
for
Microsoft
graph
feature
updates,
both
beta
and
generally
available
updates.
So
please
do
use
that
as
a
reference
point.
Okay,.
A
I
will
say:
I
will
add
from
the
use
of
West's
perspective
if
there
are
things
that
you're
interested
in.
Obviously,
this
is
definitely
very
important
right
now
to
a
lot
of
people
is
by
logging
in,
and
you
can
use
your
Microsoft
account
here
and
voting.
If
this
status
changes,
you
will
be
notified
by
user
voice
that
that
status
has
changed.
C
G
G
I
use
the
graph
a
lot
just
for
kind
of
prototyping
to
see
what's
there,
so
that
I
can
tell
other
people
to
write
code
around
it
because
I'm
not
a
developer,
but
the
biggest
problem
that
I
have
with
the
graph
and
that
I
people
like
myself
to
non-developers
is
the
permissions
part.
So
it's
helpful
to
know
when
we
don't
have
permissions,
but
I
have
not
seen
anything
yet.
That
tells
me
which
permission
I
would
need
to
do.
The
query
that
I'm
trying
to
do,
which
is
the
thing.
G
That's
always
a
stick
sticking
point
so
then
I
end
up
giving
myself
what
I
think
is
the
permissions
or
all
the
permissions,
to
figure
out
what
the
output
looks
like.
So
anything
that
can
help
with
saying
you
know
you're
trying
to
read
everybody's
presence,
but
you
don't
have
you
know,
use
a
read
all
or
whatever
yeah.
E
A
These
are
the
API
operations,
so
obviously
get
user
is
just
user
ID
and
in
the
permissions
section
that's
at
the
top
you'll
see
what
permission
Scopes
are
required
with
least
privileged
two
most
privileged
for
IVA,
the
delegated,
with
a
work
or
school
account
delegated
with
a
personal
account
like
your
Outlook
account
or
running
as
an
application.
So
app
only
demon
account
service,
account
type
approach,
and
so
this
will
give
you
the
focus
on
what
you
can
use
to
to
actually
run
this.
We
do
have
a
full
permissions
page.
A
A
H
G
A
G
A
G
Guy
know,
I
want
to
know
why
I
can't
use
it
so
I
log
in
and
I
don't
do
the
permissions
thing
right,
because
I
don't
do
the
graph
all
the
time
and
I
can't
use
a
reader
I
can't
get
my
own
presence
and
I.
Don't
know
why
I
and
what
I
want
is
a
very
simple
dialog
box.
That
says
you
need
this
exact
permission
cast
so.
A
And
the
bit
that
Betty
demonstrated
here
was
the
modify
permission
section
that
essentially
for
whatever
you've
written
up
here.
If
you
click
on
this
it'll
tell
you
exactly
what
they
are
and
it
will
tell
you
what
things
you're
like
phrases:
what
I
have
I'm
not
signed
in
if
I
sign
in
here
with
my
demo
account
it'll
actually
show
me
refresh
the
screen.
A
It'll
show
me
that,
for
this
use,
I'm
signing
to
graph
explorer
4,
slash
me
that
I've
consented
this
thing.
So
this
will
actually
work,
but
I
could
have
also
consented
these
permission
strings
and
made
it
work
as
well.
But
if
I
went
to
something
that
I
haven't
used,
if
I
run
this
right
now,
it
will
give
me
a
forbidden.
A
G
A
Click
consent
here
and
what
it's
actually
gonna
do
is
do
the
same
flow.
Your
application
would
do,
which
is
saying:
hey,
look,
Jeremy
full
graph
Explorer
and
we
need
to
add
this
permission
and
accept
it,
and
so
now,
when
you
accept
it,
the
you
I
will
now
essentially
update
and
then
I'll
get
to
run
it
and
get
the
values
back
now
it
did
me
a
two
hundred
I.
Don't
have
any
training
around
me,
because
this
account
is
basically
a
ghost
it's
not
being
used.
So
wasn't
the
best
example
getting
data.
No,
no.
G
A
F
Thanks
so
my
use
case
for
Graf
is
so
I
can
look
at
the
documentation
all
day,
but
it
can't
help
me
find
site
or
drive
or
list
IDs
and
one
on
so
usually
I'll
go
on
to
graph
explorer
and
just
kind
of
like
list
through
and
see
what
ID
is
I'm
looking
for,
so
I
can
implement
it
in
my
code.
Is
there
an
easier
way
to
go
about
finding
ideas
for
what
I'm
looking
for
yeah.
A
So
this
won't
work
without
knowing
what
the
site
ID
is,
and
so
there's
some
exploration.
What
we're
doing
right
now,
which
would
allow
us
to
kind
of
suggest,
site
IDs
from
your
tenant,
if
you
were
actually
signed
in
here,
so
I-
can
go
sign
in
as
Jeremy
in
this
profile
and
now
my
minigraf
explorer
within
a
try.
It
will
actually
kind
of
have
that
context.
A
We
don't
have
that
feature
right
now,
but
the
idea
of
being
able
to
click
here-
and
you
know
pick
from
a
list
of
site
collections
that
are
within
your
tenant
and
then
also
then
pick
here.
We
feel
would
make
that
experience
better.
Is
that
the
tip
of
light
is
that
the
kind
of
flow
that
you're
looking
for
yeah.
F
E
So
you
will
have
noticed,
maybe
in
the
new
graph
explorer,
we
don't
yet
have
the
autocomplete
capability
and
there
was
a
limited
or
to
complete
in
the
older
version
in
traffic
Laura,
where,
when
you
were
typing
the
URL,
sometimes
it
would
suggest
other
things
that
you
have
to
be
able
to
do.
We
have
significantly
improved
that
capability.
It
just
didn't
quite
make
it
into
our
build
release
so
going
forward.
We
are
going
to
be
able
to
not
only
suggest
path
segments
but
also
query
parameters
and
query,
parameter
values
and
part
of
that
larger
work.
H
Wanted
to
give
a
little
bit
of
feedback
on
the
graph,
Explorer
I
think
it's
a
wonderful
tool.
The
only
comment
I
have
is
that
I
think
it
seems
to
me
based
on
scouring
through
documentation
and
stuff.
The
primary
use
case
for
graph
the
technology
and
the
graph
Explorer
is
for
delegated
permissions.
I
might
incorrectly
be
assuming
that,
but
I
think
there
is
a
huge
amount
of
power
and
utility
and
using
the
graphics
or
not
in
a
delegated
permission
style,
but
with
client
credentials
and
application
permissions
and
multi-tenant
apps.
H
You
know,
and
all
this
really
cool
stuff
you
can
do
to
make
connecting
to
organizations
very,
very
useful
and
I
just
wanted
to
comment
that
has
a
developer
that
primarily
uses
graph.
The
technology
for
client
credentials
and
application
permissions
I
usually
find
it
really
hard
to
like
find
what
I'm
looking
for
in
the
graph,
Explorer
and
I
really
go
to
it,
because
I
have
to
know
exactly
what
call
I'm
looking
for
beforehand,
because
I'm
specifically
like
there's
nothing.
H
All
of
these
little
example
calls
on
the
Left
I,
don't
think
I've
found
a
single
one
that
uses
application
permissions.
You
know
they're.
All
delegate
permission
calls
I,
I
could
just
be
wrong.
I
might
just
have
missed
something,
but
it
would
be
really
cool
to
see
some
links
or
even
some
options
or
some
toggles
that
explain.
Here's
application
permissions
here
is
multi-tenant
apps
and
what
they
can
do.
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
power
to
be
had
inside
of
graph
and
I.
Just
don't
know
if
the
graph
Explorer
is
really
showcasing.
All
of
that
yeah.
E
I
can
take
that
we
have
done
a
lot
of
thinking
around.
How
do
we
expose
application
permissions
we've
had
mock-ups
of
how
we
can
potentially
allow
you
to
bring
your
own
app
ID.
Obviously
we
can't
well,
we
we
might
be
able
to
do
something
for
a
demo
tenant,
but
obviously
we
have
no
way
of
doing
app.
Only
permissions
for
your
tenant
unless
you
actually
bring
us
your
own
app
ID
in
your
own
client
credential,
and
then
you
actually
have
to
give
us
that
client
credential
to
enable
it.
E
So
it
brings
in
a
whole
bunch
of
security
related
issues.
So
it
very
much
is
something
that
we've
considered.
I
really
appreciate.
You
pushing
us
on
that,
because,
knowing
that
there
are
customers
who
are
explicitly
looking
for
that
scenario,
helps
us
prioritize
the
feature.
We
definitely
would
like
to
add
those
scenarios,
because
we
realize
that
they
are
a
big
part
of
the
graph
we
just
haven't
found
the
right
way
to
do
it
securely
yet.
Well,.
H
I
think
you
guys
are
actually
a
little
bit
further
than
you
might
think,
though,
because
I've
used,
the
graph
explorer
for
maybe
I'm
missing,
is
explaining
what
I'm
looking
for
here
so
I
think
the
difference
is
just
between
slash
me
and
slash
users.
You
know,
because
when
it
comes
to
the
actual
calls
to
graph,
obviously
there's
a
lot
of
you
know
Microsoft
at
any
platform
and
stuff
you
have
to
do
like
you
said
that
could
cause
security
problems,
but
in
terms
of
just
the
graph
calls
themselves.
H
I
know
a
lot
of
them
like
if
I
want
to
get
a
user
instead
of
a
slash
means
to
slash
user
ID
and
at
least
in
the
older
version
or
graph
explorer
I
was
able
to
with
a
signed
an
account.
You
know
where
I
granted,
the
application
permissions
on
the
Azure
tenant
or
whatever
like
I,
was
able
to
do
a
slash
users
call
and
it
works
correctly.
Well,.
A
But
the
idea
being
is,
is
that
I
could
consent
from
here
and
get
that
that
particular
query
working,
and
so
you
know
you
can
use
this
way
of
navigating
at
the
top
level.
Of
what
workload
am
I
interested
in
and
get
down
to
the
operation
and
try
it
here.
I
totally
hear
you
on
the
broad
stroke
of
graph
Explorer
of
being
kind
of
a
the
samples
are
scoped
or
whatever
we've
decided
to
make
his
samples
so
definitely
kind
of
get
you
on
that
one.
The
other
thing
I
wanted
to
bring
up
was.
A
We
do
have
postman.
So,
in
the,
if
you
go
into
our
graph
Docs
and
in
the
use
the
API
section
here,
you'll
see,
there's
a
use
postman
section.
We
have
a
github
collection,
there's
a
video
there
which
I
did
and
steps
on
how
you
import
it,
and
essentially
this
will
give
you
a
delegated
the
same
as
graph
Explorer,
but
it'll
also
give
you
application
permissions
as
well,
and
so
we've
kind
of
given
you
all
the
little
configurations
to
be
able
to
get
that
going
with
that
potently
and
so
I
personally.
A
Use
postman
to
kind
of
validate
API
is
when
I
get
questions
and
I'll,
even
like
save
my
own
custom
collections
for
demos
when
I'm
hired
showing
to
partners
and
customers
too
so
I
do
find
this
postman
super
useful
and
that's
a
free
tool
and,
as
I
say,
the
collections,
open-source
and
there's
people
on
this
call
like
vinson
that
have
contributed
a
fair
amount
of
additional
examples
into
this
collection
that
you
can
just
Byam.
You
know
following
following
these
steps
in
thank.
H
You
guys
that's
awesome.
Thank
you
for
listening
to
feedback,
that's
really
cool,
not
a
lot
of
teams.
Do
that
and
also
this
postman
things
look
really
really
sweet
and
I
had
no
idea.
It
existed
because
it's
kind
of
hidden
in
the
docs
here,
I,
yeah,
I
I,
think
that
would
be
an
awesome
link
to
throw
in
your
graph,
Explorer
just
say,
prefer,
postman
and
then
take
it
right
to
this
page,
because
that
is
what
is
that
is
that,
like
a
hundred
and
twenty
one
sample
requests
that
I'm
seeing
on
that
picture,
yeah.
A
A
Like
out
third,
most
hit
blog
post
of
all
time
where
we
announced
this
so
yeah.
That
is
a
fair
point
that
we
could
promote
this
from
graph
explorer
app
only
usage.
That
is
a
good
good
suggestion
and
I
hear
you
totally
on
that.
It's
you
know
buried
in
the
develop
easier,
API,
she's,
postman
section
and.
E
Just
to
add
one
more
thing
with
regards
to
this
new
version
of
graph
Explorer,
whilst
we've
added
a
lot
of
front-facing
features,
we
also
have
made
a
bunch
of
changes
on
the
back
end
to
in
the
past,
for
teams
when
they
wanted
to
add
samples
they
had
to
come
to
a
git
repo
pull
down
the
source
code.
Do
a
PR
against
our
source
code.
So
adding
new
samples
for
the
various
teams
was
not
nearly
so
easy.
E
H
A
Thank
you
guys
so
much
welcome
thanks
for
the
feedback.
It's
great
I
it
all.
This
really
helps
us
to
validate.
I
mean
we're
right
in
the
middle
of
a
planning
cycle
for
what
we
could
we're
in
manganese
right
now,
we're
about
to
move
into
iron,
which
will
start
in
July
to
December
and
so
having
all
these
feature.
Requests
like
really
nailed
down
on
priority
really
helps
us
to
plan
what
we
do
next.
So
this
is
what
we're
doing
this
call
like
this.
A
It
it's
a
little
bit
more
an
open
format,
but
it
really
just
helps
us
if
you
guys
can
share
that
type
of
stuff,
so
already
a
few
great
ideas
in
here.
So
this
is
awesome.
Sean
comment
for
the
autocomplete
feature
to
be
implemented
again.
It
was
decent
before
an
improvement.
Sound
nice
yeah.
We
I
personally
missed
that
as
well,
so
be
good
to
get
that
back
under
is
Honduras.
We
don't
have
an
API
to
ask
what
what
rights
the
user
has.
We
can
only
guess
or
test
the
hard
way
darah
was
there.
E
A
A
A
A
A
D
That
is,
that
is
okay,
but
but
my
question
is
so
if
we
use
a
basic
graph
APIs,
for
example,
to
send
an
email
or
to
send
an
calendar
in
Y.
So
in
that
case
also,
if
there
is
nothing
mentioning
that
node
or
in
that
document,
then
it
is
not
costing
any
pricing
or
it
is
not
in
what
any
cost
right
or
if
you
can
have
a
separate
document
link
where
it
shows
okay,
these
are
the
API
is
where
you
will
get
to
charge
this
much
number
of
rupees
or
dollars.
A
That's
fair
yep.
We
could
definitely
have
something
in
use
your
API
around
pricing
to
kind
of
point,
all
the
ones
that
you
have
to
be
aware
of
for
licensing.
That's
a
good
point.
I'll
make
a
note
of
that.
Just
so,
you
know
like
sending
a
mail
I
mean
as
long
as
you're,
sending
it
from
a
user
that
has
a
mailbox
they're
paying
for
that
mailbox,
whether
it's
a
v1
e35
account,
and
so
that's
the
only
requirement
there
for
that.
A
E
F
Guys,
thanks
for
setting
all
this
up,
I
came
in
on
the
back
half.
So
if
you've
already
answered
this
question,
please
let
me
know
and
I'll
look
at
the
recording
later.
Do
you
have
any
updates
on
the
Microsoft
graph
PowerShell
module,
potentially
when
they
might
go
GA
or
when
you
can
start
recommending
folks
use
that
on
a
regular
basis,
we.
E
A
Thank
you
much
I
love
power
show
I.
Actually
you
they
taught
claims
like
yay
and
de
speak.
Thank
you
for
everyone's
giving
feedback
with
that.
Powershot
sdks
has
been
awesome
to
steer
and
I've
loved
Darrell's
approach
to
doing
it
as
a
p.m.
as
well
like.
There's
been
a
lot
of
stuff
where,
without
fair
viewing
solo
discussions
and
community
voices
certainly
helped
with
us
making
those
decisions
which
is
great
Donny
I'm
curious
about
the
heavy
focus
on
rest
calls
versus
implementing
the
SDK
is
the
rest
interface
expected
to
be
the
major
use
case.
E
Our
goal
has
been
to
build
SDKs
that
make
it
a
really
easy
choice
of.
Why
would
I
do
all
of
this
work
myself
I
mean
if
somebody
absolutely
has
their
own
library
for
calling
api's
and
they
already
handle
all
the
throttling
situations,
redirects
and
authentication,
and
they
know
exactly
what
they're
doing
and
they
built
it
and
whatever,
but
fine
go
ahead.
We're
not
going
to
discourage
you
from
doing
that.
E
However,
if
you're
coming
to
the
graph,
we
are
building
all
kinds
of
capabilities
into
the
SDK
is
to
support
throttling
and
redirects
and
and
being
able
to
help
you
do
batch
requests
and
we've
got
plans
for
bringing
in
caching
and
long-running
operations
and
all
kinds
of
other
capabilities
that
we
know
you
need
to
address
on
graph
and
what
we
don't
want
to
do
is
to
have
every
developer
have
to
reinvent
the
wheel
on
those
things.
So
we
will
continue
treating
this.
E
It
is
an
HTTP
API,
where
there's
no
plans
from
our
side
to
hide
this
as
an
HTTP
API,
we
will
always
continue
documenting
them
as
basic
plain
old
HP
calls.
But
then,
hopefully
we
will
provide
enough
value
in
whatever
language
you
want
to
use
to
make
it
a
really
easy
choice
to
just
go.
Do
this
use
the
SDK
and
the
SDKs
are
also
built
with
flexibility
in
mind.
You
can
choose
how
much
of
it
you
want
to
use.
E
If
you
just
want
to
use
the
core
library
and
don't
want
to
pull
in
all
of
our
generated
types.
That's
perfectly
fine,
too.
That
is
a
supported
scenario.
If
you
want
the
full
experience,
we
will
deserialize
everything
into
strong
types.
Then
that's
another
option
to
you
and
you
should
be
able
to
plug
and
play
and
just
choose
the
exact
components
that
we
provide
without
being
tied
into
anything
yeah.
A
As
expected,
solid
answer
and
I
will
add
that
we
in
some
cases,
like
the
Microsoft
graph
toolkit,
we
even
put
another
layer
on
top
where
essentially
we're
doing
the
identity
provider
calls
with
M
cell
we're
making
that
graph
calls
with
the
graph
SDKs
and
basically
giving
you
the
components
and
so
I
saw
the
comments
of
like
idiot-proof
in
there.
And
so
you
know,
I,
don't
think
anyone's
an
idiot
in
this
call.
But
I
do
love
the
fact
that
how
easy
it
is
to
get
this
stuff
going
right.
A
Just
being
an
add,
a
sign
in
component
straight
into
my
web.
App
like
we
did
in
the
live,
show
with
one
line
of
code
referencing
a
JavaScript
package,
and
so
you
know
it
just
depends
on
what
layer
of
the
stack
you
want
to
go
to,
and
we
have
different
audiences
and
different
spectrums
of
developers
that
are
either
wanting
totally
their
hands
held
and
just
get
things
going
really
quick
to
wanting
to
work
at
that
layer
of
rest
and
have
their
own
kind
of
notions
of
how
they
want
to
handle
things.
A
You
know
we
lead
with
rest
because
it's
kind
of
the
most
universal
language,
but
you
know
we
do
encourage
you
by
the
docs
to
you,
know,
use
those
SDKs
and,
as
people
have
asked,
we
will
be
putting
power
show
here
at
some
point
in
the
future
as
well.
There
is
one
question
here:
around
adaptive
cards
and
I'm,
pretty
sure
Betty's
audio
is
hoes.
A
I
will
ants
on
her
behalf,
so
the
adaptive
cards
aspect
we
ship
that
in
preview
for
for
build,
and
essentially
when
you
run
it
for
various
of
these
calls,
the
adaptive
cards
will
show
up
and
we're
rendering
those.
What
we
don't
have
right
now
is
a
button
that
explains
which
adaptive
card
template
that
is
using
from
the
attactive
card
library.
So
we
do
need
to
add
a
button
here
to
do
that.
So
just
bear
with
us
on
that
this.
This
really
is
a
preview
feature.
A
We're
exploring
we're
measuring
how
many
people
are
kind
of
going
in
here
and
even
looking
at
it.
But
the
idea
being
is
is
that
we
have
a
way
of
correlating
what
the
request
is
here
and
essentially
what
the
data
entity
that's
coming
back
is
a
mapping
that
to
an
adaptive
car
template
just
to
render
it
and
so
you'll
be
able
to
then
grab
that
template
and
do
that
same
kind
of
logic
yourself,
and
it's
something
that
the
Microsoft
graph
toolkit
team
I'm
going
to
do
as
I
care,
smart
control
as
well.
A
So
you
know
you'll
be
able
to
throw
to
the
get
web
control
of
graph
talk
here,
a
query
and
it
will
use
the
adaptive
car
template
engine
to
kind
of
give
you
a
first
go
at
like
this
is
what
we
think
we
could
render
for
you,
rather
than
just
kind
of
rendering
back
JSON.
So
that
was
one
last
quick
one
and
then
I
will
just
quickly
scan
here.
Thank
You
Betty
for
answering
questions
in
the
chat
and
yes,
CSS.
Please
please,
please
the
develop
developer
program.
A
This
tenant
came
from
a
developer
program,
I
believe
I,
don't
know,
I
stole
it
from
the
cola,
but
you
can
go
sign
up
for
one
here
and
you
can
obviously
see
in
your
dashboard
your
environment
as
long
as
you're
using
it
it'll
keep
renewing,
please
I
would
not
encourage
you
use
your
production
accounts
of
graph
explorer.
There
are
plenty
of
api's
here
that
will
kind
of
do
things.
A
A
We
really
appreciate
this
and
we
couldn't
do
our
jobs
without
our
banning
blind
and
thinking
of
things
that
we
think
customers
are
gonna
want
is
super
hard
and
sometimes
what
we
want,
isn't
what
you
you
want,
and
so
I
really
appreciate,
and
we
all
do
you
jumping
on
the
call
this
morning
to
give
that
feedback.
Please
please
keep
it
coming
and
he
had
the
email
address
of
G
whoops
I'm,
hiding
it
G
feedback
at
Microsoft
comm.
A
If
you
would
like
to
meet
with
her
one
on
one
and
then
if
you
are
finding
issues
or
want
to
report
a
feature
request
there,
you
can
use
this
gap
issues
link
from
the
Microsoft
graph
organization
within
github
and
it
is
graph
exploring
v4.
That
is
the
version
of
this
new
experience
we
have,
and
that
would
be
where
we
would
like
to
report
those
issues.
A
It's
also
a
place
you
can
go
and
see
if
the
issue
your
experience
and
has
already
been
occurring
already-
and
we
would
love
you
to
chime
in
and
just
say,
hey
look.
We're
still
getting
that
issue
or
we're
experiencing
it
too,
and
here's
the
repo.
It
really
helps
us
and
our
developers,
engineers
in
the
background
who
are
always
Betty
in
Nairobi
in
Kenya
to
work
these
things
out.
So
the
team
would
really
appreciate
that
too.
So
with
that,
thank
you
again
same
time.
Next
month,
it's
the
first
Tuesday
of
the
month
at
8
a.m.
A
PDT,
and
this
on-demand
recording
will
be
in
that
YouTube
channel.
The
mics
are
365,
develop
a
youtube
channel
where
you
can
pull
this
down.
So
if
you've
got
people
who
missed
this,
that
wanting
that
see
it,
you
can
point
them
to
the
video
and
we'll
announce
the
on-demand
video
on
our
blog.
The
tri
showcase
did
through
the
graft
or
Microsoft
com
website.
A
So
big
thanks
for
everyone
that
chimed
in
Betty,
Darrel,
Vincent
and
all
the
guests
kind
of
gave
feedback
and
sorry
Betty
that
your
audio
wasn't
working
great
and
hopefully
you
are
able
to
listen
while
we
kind
of
stepped
in
and
was
your
voice.
What
are
the
cool
was
happening
and
see
you
again
next
month.