►
From YouTube: SharePoint Dev Weekly - Episode 36 - 24th of April 2019
Description
SharePoint Dev Weekly is a weekly video chat where Vesa and Waldek are talking about the latest news and topics around the SharePoint dev area. This time they were joined by Spencer Harbar (ClearPeople) for a chat and article coverage.
If you want your article or sample mentioned, please use the #SPDevWeekly hashtag on Twitter for letting us know.
This video was recorded on Tuesday 23rd of April 2019.
You can find more details on the weekly summary from the SharePoint Dev blog from http://aka.ms/spdev-blog. More details on the SharePoint Dev community available from http://aka.ms/sppnp.
A
Welcome
everybody:
it
is
Shep
on
deaf
weekly
episode,
36.
It
is
now
23rd
of
April,
because
yesterday
today's
Tuesday
typically
will
record
this
on
Monday.
But
Monday
was
the
public
holiday
at
maturity
of
Europe
right,
at
least
in
my
location
and
in
your
locations
as
well.
Right,
yes,
yeah,
except
in
u.s.
u.s.
didn't
have
a
free
time.
So
at
least
this
time
you
were
planning
the
private
joke.
Sorry
volley!
No.
C
A
C
Yeah
so
I'm,
based
in
Edinburgh
in
the
United
Kingdom
and
yes,
as
I
kind
of
alluded
to
been
working
with
sharepoint
for
quite
a
long
time
now
started
way
back
before
the
product
was
first
released
with
a
company.
I
was
working
with
at
the
time
development
house.
Here
in
Edinburgh,
we
were
looking
at
some
very
similar
things
to
what
ended
up
being
again.
C
Eventually
in
SharePoint
portal
server,
then
I
sort
of
switch
gears
a
little
bit
and
moved
into
the
security
industry
for
five
years
or
so
before,
going
back
into
a
sort
of
mainstream
Microsoft
technology
stack
and
been
there
been
there
ever
since
so
yeah,
mostly
known
I,
guess
in
the
community.
For
you
know,
infrastructure
focused
topics
whether
it
be
hybrid
or
you
know
some
of
the
legacy
on
Prem
problem
areas
of
the
product,
but
my
background
is
actually
as
a
software
developer.
That's
how
I
started
in
the
business.
C
C
Yeah
very
quickly,
you
know
moved
into
what
we
would
call
software
development
now
so
from
you
know,
it's
a
little
bit
unusual
in
some
respects
because,
whilst
I'm
focused
in
terms
of
what
I
do
publicly
on
the
infrastructure
pieces
for
quite
a
while,
you
know
that
background
is
that
probably
the
the
thing
that
makes
made
that
infrastructure
focus?
You
know
quite
easy
in
a
number
of
respects,
made
it
easier
to
understand
some
of
the
mysteries
about
what
the
SharePoint
products
doing
you
know
behind
us
or
under
the
covers.
C
You
know.
Hence
some
of
the
work
that's
been
done
on
things
like
distributed,
cache
and
user
profiles,
and
so
on
and
so
forth
in
recent
times,
I've
kind
of
moved
away
from
SharePoint,
and
mostly
folks
now
on
Azure
and
obviously
office
365.
But
you
know
it's
a
pretty
mixed
bag
really
these
days,
identity
is
still
a
huge
challenge.
C
I
still
work
mostly
with
enterprise
customers,
so
they
tend
to
be
bogged
down
in
some
of
the
governance
or
user
adoption
challenges
as
well
and
also
involved
heavily
in
the
upcoming
conference
in
just
under
a
month
in
Germany
collapse
summit.
So
the
organization
behind
the
scenes
for
that
is,
you
know,
takes
up
a
chunk
of
my
time,
yep
or
free
time.
You
know
outside
of
work,
getting
everything
arranged,
I,
look
after
the
content
and
the
speakers
and
all
that
side
of
the
conference
so
work.
You
know
fingers
crossed
touching
wood
that
you
know.
C
C
Yeah
and
there's
always
the
things
you
yeah,
you
can
be
perfect
prepared
as
you
like,
but
you
know
something
happens.
You
just
deal
that
the
best
you
can
but
yeah
minimizing
the
it's
interesting,
because
the
event
has
grown
now
to
quite
a
significant
size.
You
know
that
the
challenges
a
lot
of
them
are
the
same
that
you
get
every
event,
but
just
because
of
the
size
now
there's
a
lot
of
other
things
that
crop
up.
C
That
you'd
never
really
thought
about
before
and
that's
interesting
to
me,
because
I
was
involved
in
the
conference
that
happened
in
London
every
year
for
five
or
six
years
who
worked
with
Steve
Smith
on
that,
and
we
we
try
to
make
that
conference,
be
all
of
the
things
the
different,
in
other
words,
to
fix
all
of
the
things
we
didn't
like
about
the
big
conferences.
But
then,
when
you
actually
do
a
big
conference,
you
start
to
understand
why
some
of
the
things
and
the
way
they
are
at
the
big
conference
of
we
all
hate.
B
C
You
know
once
you
actually
ride
one.
It
becomes
obvious
that
in
some
cases,
there's
no
way
to
avoid
things
that
you
wouldn't
even
consider,
if
you're
just
doing
that
kind
of
a
user
group
or
a
SharePoint
Saturday
type
of
that
so
yeah,
it's
from
fun
and
games
and
obviously
working
with
you
know
and
as
you
go
I'm
a
tire
thing
in
those
cars
you
know
I
mean
it's
just
that
a
great
I
mean
you've
got
to.
A
We
can
do
pppppp
on
that
section
now
and
a
few
things
what
to
mention
actually,
first
of
all,
I
have
to
say
and
well
it
was
saying
this
earlier
as
well.
The
book
shell
looks
awesome,
the
adult
hooks
on
a
background
and
some
of
the
old
schools
in
quotes
old
school
people.
We
can
definitely
recognize
that
style
of
a
it's
Microsoft
learning
Starbucks
with.
C
Yeah,
the
top
ones
resort
kind
of
dotnet,
not
net
first
came
out.
They
did
these
two
different
kind
of
series
and
they'd
add
these
cubes.
You
know
on
the
covers,
I
think
that
list
of
my
Microsoft
grass
or
one
of
those
publishes
yeah
I,
keep
meaning
to
sort
that
out
and
maybe
new
or
some
things
that
obviously
I
haven't
brought
well.
I
did
I
did
I
I,
don't
really
buy
books
anymore,
I
tend
to
get
given.
You
know
copies
by
the
authors
or
I,
find
reviewing
them
for
people
and
stuff,
like
that.
C
You
know,
but
yeah
I
prefer
actually
having,
especially
when
I
was.
You
know,
learning
net
there
was
that
whole
kind
of
period
of
time
98
through
to
2001,
where
it
was
all
new,
and
that
was
the
only
way
I
could
really
do
it
was
to
sit
down
with
the
actual
book.
You
know
you
can't
you're
not
doing
that
these
days,
because
you
know
all
the
information
is
online.
You
know,
or
in
most
cases
most
of
the
information
is
in
the
video.
A
B
A
B
B
You
do
some
stuff
and
they
work,
but
you
don't
really
truly
get
the
whole
thing,
because
it's
just
an
article
and
then
to
get
the
whole
and
and
the
great
thing
about
a
book
is
that
it
covers
it
from
the
beginning
to
D
and
and
then
sometimes
even
really,
really
deep
right
and
you
don't
get
that
amount
of
info
in
single
place
in
the
same
cohesive
way
online.
From
from
from
an
article
yeah.
C
If
it's
a
good
book
it'll
certainly
have
a
story,
you
know,
I'll
tell
a
story
which
helps
the
learning
experience
and
there's
so
much
now
that
it's
you
know
you
can
you.
You
pick
things
up
and
you
can
learn
from
article,
but
you
end
up
in
most
cases
having
to
read
it
multiple
times
and
then
you
forget
all
well
I.
Remember
vaguely,
remember.
C
About
that
and
then
you
hunt
around
you
try
and
find
it,
and
then
you
stop.
You
know
you
find
it
again
or
you
get
distracted
I
compared
it
to
learning
music.
If
you,
if
you
you
know
one
of
the
ways
to
the
music
so
that
you
can
memorize
music
is
to
continually
repeats
here,
a
structured
learning
program
and
that's
very
similar
to
following
coding
examples
in
a
book.
Mcat
you're,
actually
repeating
certain
things
over
and
over
again
and
that's
essential
to
learning.
B
I
guess
there's
also
interesting,
because
I
think
that
for
or
at
least
it
seems
to
be
that
way
that
for
the
last
few
years,
there's
this
big
big
hype
of
you
have
to
be
on
on
the
edge.
You
have
to
use
the
light
as
the
greatest,
even
though
you
don't
really
understand
the
benefits
and
there's
like
there's,
especially
from
the
social
code,
things
it
might
work
or
not,
but
to
really
comprehend
the
pros
and
cons
the
benefits
things
to
take
into
account.
Kev.
C
B
C
I
think
the
other.
The
other
thing
is
quite
important,
particularly
with
software
development
considerations
is
the
the
one
thing
that
you
know
always
being
on
the
bleeding
edge
Lou
using
the
latest
framework
using
the
latest
tools
and
techniques,
and
you
know
kind
of
dealing
with
the
how
to
stay
up
to
date
and
how
to
learn
that
stuff
and
quickly
enough
to
get
value
from
that.
What
that
means
is
you're,
not
you
know
a
lot
of
in
most
cases,
you're
not
focusing
on
the
fundamentals,
design,
choices
that
have
been
made.
C
You
know
to
implement
that
new
framework
or
whatever,
and
we
came
up.
We
did
this.
We
found
this
with
the
MCM
program.
Quite
often
most
of
the
topics
that
we
were
teaching,
the
specifics
were
important
for
sure,
but
that's
wasn't
really
what
we
were
focusing
on
in
terms
of
the
for
the
folks
who
weren't
familiar
with
that.
If
we
take
transaction
processing
as
an
example
sure
you
can
pick
and
choose
one
of
ten
frameworks
to
implement
that.
A
No,
no,
that's
an
interesting
I
got
back
on
that
one
in
a
second
just
to
clarify
all
so
me
and
spins
I
got
to
know
spins
because
he
was
in
DMC
and
training
at
marks
are
certified
for
SharePoint
certification
program
as
an
instructor
as
I
was,
and
what
we
did
like.
I
did
18
rotations
and
we
were
apparently
we
always
overlapped
with.
C
C
C
A
But
now
coming
back
on
the
on
the
back
on
the
serious
discussion
you,
you
actually
mentioned
something
really
interesting
around
the
back
filling
of
the
understanding
and-
and
that's
really,
if
you
think
about
the
the
the
current
situation.
We
talked
about
this
one
almost
every
single
week
within
the
share
point
of
a
club,
it's
kind
of
interesting.
But
it's
a
it's
a
crowing
theme
and
do
you
actually
need
to
understand
the
background
information
or
not
so
I'll
be
already
heading
to
the
direction
where
it
doesn't
matter.
A
B
No
I
mean
so
one
of
the
things
that
I
think
there
is
a
typical
example,
especially
when
you,
when
you
think
about
365,
but
maybe
in
other
areas
as
well,
is
that
all
samples
for
code
like
when
you
call
from
front
and
an
API
to
get
data
it
just
like
sample,
call
single
call
it
works.
But
then
you
build
a
thing.
B
The
thing
that
you've
built
is
being
deployed
at
scale
and
you
things
like
Rutley
yep
and
no
examples
explained
it
because
examples
are
simple
right
and
there
is
no
logging
and
there's
and
at
that
point
is
oh
crap.
How
do
I
go
around
that?
How
do
I
wu
and
where
do
you
get
that
info
from
and
then
you
have
to
said
okay,
so
why
is
it
there
how
it
works?
How
do
you
handle
and
so
forth,
and
so
on?
Right,
so
I
don't
know,
I
think
there
is
like
for
some
things.
C
I
mean
there's
many
facets
to
this.
I
mean
it's
certainly
true,
that
one
can
be
successful
as
a
implementer
of
office
365
or
any
other
service
software
as
a
service.
You
know,
without
being
you
know,
being
able
to
recite
computer
science
theories
and
things
like
that.
It's
certainly
true,
but
then
on
the
that
you
know,
there's
all
that
mentioned
troubleshooting.
You
know
the
more.
You
know
the
easier
that
will
be
the
classic
one
with
office.
365,
of
course,
is
page
load
performance.
C
You
know
the
the
canonical
leagues,
you
know
complaint
that
we've
all
heard
all
the
share
points
so
and
then
you
check
in
it's
like
no,
it's
not
it's
perfectly.
Okay,
all
online
machine,
you
know
and
all
that
kind
of
stuff,
and
then,
when
you
start
extending
the
solution,
you
know
build
on
top
of
office
365,
so
you
may
be
hosting
components
in
as
you're.
C
You
know
making
use
of
platform
as
a
service,
and
then
it
becomes
increasingly
important
if
you
want
to
improve
in
your
career,
and
you
want
to
become
more
of
an
architect
and
less
of
an
implementer.
You
know
have
to
make
design
choices
where
it's
the
right
place
for
this
component
to
live.
Should
it
be
a
flow
or
should
it
be
a
logic
up?
C
You
know
those
kind
of
things,
and
so
the
more
information
you
like
with
any
discipline
in
life,
the
more
you
know
about
the
fundamentals,
the
more
successful
you
will
be
as
you
go
forward,
but
there
are
many
areas
where,
even
whilst
you
don't
need
to
know
the
details
of
why
these
choices
have
been
made
by
the
vendors
information,
security
would
be
the
best
example.
It's
still
very
important
that
you
don't
have
keys
in
plain
text
in
a
configuration.
B
C
Yet
that's
a
circular
thing
that
you
know
keeps
coming
back
to
check.
You
know
regardless
yeah
tools
and
technologies
were
using
whether
it's
client-server
and
then
it's
web,
and
then
it's
service
I
can
whatever
there's
always
a
cycle
where
you
stop
and
you
start
seeing
those
in
samples
again,
you
know,
hang
on
you
know
so
yeah.
It's
also
a
question
of
having
that
base
level
of
quality
of
whatever
you
deliver.
You
know
it
doesn't
solve.
C
B
C
You
know
it's,
you
know
an
easy
trap
to
fall
into
so
I
certainly
think
that
the
you
know,
programming,
specific
and
programming
language.
Specific
concepts
remain
as
important
as
he
or
so,
and
so
how
you
design
an
interface.
Those
kind
of
it
will
save
you
so
much
time.
I
mean
even
just
one
of
the
little
things
that
we've
got
on
the
on
the
github
repository
for
user
profiles.
It's
if
we
were
going
to
do
that
tomorrow,
we're
going
to
start
that
tomorrow
the
interface
would
be
completely
different
to
the
one
that
we've
got
there.
C
So
what
do
we
do?
Do
we
throw
it
away
and
start
again?
We
kind
of
you
know.
Yeah
is
the
answer,
but
we
can't
because
we've
got
people
using
the
one,
exactly
yeah
yeah
yeah,
so
it
certainly
made
it
higher
level
yeah.
You
know
the
abstraction
layers
are
always
increasing,
but
it
doesn't
take
away
that
fundamental,
but.
A
Now,
our
customers,
what's
your
kind
of
a
take
on
this
one,
our
customer
is
still
willing
but
to
pay
for
the
knowledge
and
experience
enough
comparing
the
value
but
that
campaign,
because
we
more
and
more,
we
are
heading
to
this
good
enough,
IT
thinking
which,
by
the
way,
I
talked
about
in
MCM,
which
is
weird,
it
gets
to
be
now
visible
in
all
around
the
industry,
where
people
don't
really
care,
as
long
as
it
does
from
a
UI
perspective.
What
is
expected
to
happen?
I,
don't
care
yeah,.
C
Partly
yeah:
well
again,
it's
a
very
kind
of
there's
two
ends
to
this.
You
know
those
for
the
most
part.
The
concepts
are
kind
of
good
enough
and
quick
enough.
You
know
now
the
answer
is
no.
Customers
are
not
willing
to
pay
for
that.
You
know
level
of
quality
or
whatever
you
want
to
call
it,
because
it
takes
too
long
to
implement.
You
know.
The
whole
benefit
of
software-as-a-service,
in
essence,
is
that
you
can
get
the
stuff
quickly.
You
can
try
it.
C
If
you
don't
like
it,
you
can
throw
it
when
you
something
else
or
you
can.
You
know,
wait
for
the
next
improvements
and
you're
on
that
continual
cycle.
But
then,
if
you
start
thinking
about
data
loss,
critical
information,
you
know
data
loss
is
not
negativa.
You
know
it's
not
acceptable
and
end
of
conversation.
So
in
some
respects
you
know
it
still
needs
to
be
there,
but
as
to
whether
you
know,
customers
are
willing
to
pay
practitioners
know
I
mean
everybody,
wants
everything
faster
and
cheaper
quickly.
C
They
don't
necessarily
care
about
it
being
better,
but
then
there
are
also
some
considerations
to
think
about
from
a
kind
of
adoption.
Slash
governance
perspective
in
terms
of
you
know,
the
idea
with
office
365
is
that
it
software
as
a
service.
You
can
embellish
it
with
customizations,
but
you
can't
intrinsically
change
the
behavior.
A
C
A
Or
does
it
matter
and
how
much
does
it
matter?
Yeah?
That's
that's
yeah!
So
that's
the
interesting.
It
all
depends
discussions
and
sure
from
a
code,
quality
perspective
and
security
perspective.
That's
what
what
well
they
actually
represent
right.
So
the
people
are
willing
to
then
buy
is
be
solutions
and
automations,
which
will
these.
B
Things-
and
that
is
an
interesting
thing
right,
because
we
we
talk
to
customers
a
lot
right
and
at
first
I
say
so.
If
a
person
was
never
exposed
to
any
issues.
They're
like
no
I
mean
we're
perfect.
We
don't
have
any
issues
until
you
show
them
like.
One
of
the
things
we
offer
at
remember
is
an
assessment,
basically
to
give
them
a
proof
like.
B
Let
us
basically
do
an
x-ray
on
your
environment
and
have
you
see
for
yourself
what
you
have
and
then,
like
the
other
day,
we
run
an
assessment
of
an
on-premises
farm
for
an
enterprise.
We
found
hundreds
of
thousands
of
apps
and
an
app
being
a
piece
of
script
that
can
be
embedded
on
a
paste
is
anything
like
bespoke,
app
and
angular
or
workflow
WSP
anything
right,
and
they
have
thousands
of
that
on
their
home
environments
and
don't
think
they
know
like
yeah
okay.
B
Whatever
right
and
the
interesting
part
is
that,
like
we
hear
a
lot,
that
they
will
invest
in
things
like
VPN
access,
when
you
work
at
home,
you
cannot
access
it.
You
will
have
RSA
tokens,
you
get
all
kinds
of
things
to
basically
give
them
the
impression
that
you're
safe
and
then
they
will
allow
the
users
to
embed
a
random
piece
of
script
from
internet
on
their
pages,
which
is
basically
already
in,
and
that
script
can
then
do
on
behalf
of
the
person
who
is
already
on
a
page
anything.
C
C,
classic
you
know,
IT
industry
trend
cycle,
I
should
say
right,
regardless
of
the
trends
in
the
industry.
These
things
persist,
you
might
imagine
you.
Virtually
all
organizations
are
still
kind
of
handcuffed
to
these
legacy
security
technologists.
You
know
that
protect
the
edge
of
the
network
or
you
know,
make
it
more
difficult
for
people
to
log
in
and
all
of
these
kind
of
things,
because
you
know
there's
a
whole
bunch
of
IT
vendor
security,
vendors
that
are
selling
stuff
and
they
they
have
their
behind.
C
You
know:
there's
free
vendors,
basically
and
in
the
business
who
are
so
far
ahead
of
everybody
else,
with
what
they're
bringing
to
market
and
the
place
that
they're
bringing
them
to
market
app
and
everybody
else
is
kind
of
rushing
to
follow,
follow
up,
and
so
you
can
spend
all
that
money
on.
You
know
tier
or
you
know,
two-factor
authentication
whatever
it
might
be,
but
the
real
risk
is
actually
in
the
web
applications
I
mean
you
just
look
at
the
news
every
time,
there's
a
data
breach.
C
You
know
oh
well,
who
didn't
realize
you
know
that
it
was
some
old
ex
behind
the
scenes
of
Ireland
yeah.
You
know
if
you
think
about
graph
API,
that's
an
incredibly
powerful
capability,
but
if
you're
running
that
as
the
tenon
administrator
you're
going
to
see
different
results
than
if
you
run
it
in
the
context
of
the
user,
so
yeah.
C
For
us
or
most
of
us
in
this
space,
you
know
Microsoft
a
very
serious
about
how
they
provide
the
sandbox
in
which
we
run,
and
that's
not
always
the
case
with
all
of
the
cloud
vendors.
So
that
gives
us
a
certain
confidence
factor,
but
it
makes
running
that
took
the
kind
of
tools
that
you
just
described
so
important
also
think
about
most
of
the
things
that
we
build
nowadays
and
leveraging
somebody
else's
JavaScript
framework.
Yes,
what
happens
if
their
ability
in
no
yes
and
so
on.
A
Now
I
just
had
a
last
week
a
discussion
with
one
of
my
good
friends
ex
well
he's
in
Mal
days
in
sales
party,
but
his
neck
seems
there's
consult
on
fire
who
used
to
work
on
SharePoint
for
years
and
years
and
years
and
decades,
and
now
he's
on
the
on
sales
part
and
basically
then
explaining
why
share
ponder
scoot
and
all
of
that
stuff.
But
then
it's
like
well.
A
He
told
me
that
it's
it's
a
really
restricting
factor
in
the
modern
SharePoint
that
we
do
not
allow
scripts
editors
being
embedded,
because
that
increases
the
costs
making
everybody's
life
difficult
and
then
it's
restricting
what
can
be
actually
happening.
So
he
recommended
that
his
customers
would
still
staying
publishing
a
classic
policy.
Well.
B
A
It
is
an
interesting
kind
of
a
it's
an
interesting
dilemma
for
Microsoft
as
well,
and
especially
for
SharePoint,
if
you
think
about
it,
because
we
used
to
tell
people
what
you
whatever
and
then
suddenly
we've
realized.
Maybe
this
isn't
the
right
thing
to
do,
and
especially
now
that
we're
hosting
our
stuff
in
the
SharePoint
office
office
365.
We
can't
compromise
the
environment
on
the
behalf
of
the
users
and
all
we
have
it
to
customers.
B
But
I
guess
for
a
partner.
It
also
has
to
decide
that
over
time
things
change
right.
If
you
look
at
like
back
in
the
days,
let's
say
15
years
back,
the
only
things
that
that
you
could
do
JavaScript
wise
was
to
show
clock
on
a
site
or
our
key
text.
Journalist
you
can
perform
Ajax
calls
to
different
api's,
pulling
data
manipulating
things
you
can
do
so
much
more,
but
that
also
on
one
hand,
that
is
empowerment
because
you
can
achieve
more.
B
C
You
know
to
use
a
made-up
word
deployments
of
SharePoint
on-premises
historically
well,
no
we're
nowhere
close
to
the
level
of
you
know,
robustness,
except
sure
that
the
Shapley
is
despite
what
people
would
say
about
how
wonderful
the
systems
they
were.
I
worked
on
all
the
big
deployments.
They
weren't
that
great
for
somebody
who's
not
willing
to
put
you
know
an
incredible
amount
of
resources,
and
you
know
the
companies
running.
C
These
things
are
not
in
the
software
business
they're
in
the
making
cars
business
or
making
you
know,
beverages
business
and
so
that
soaks
up
all
the
energy,
which
means
there's
nobody.
Looking
at
the
kind
of
things
that
we're
talking
about
in
that
environment,
you
know,
whereas,
with
you
know,
Microsoft
services
Amazon
do
the
same
thing
as
well.
You
know,
there's
a
whole
crew
of
people
that
have
got
no
interest
in
keeping
the
service
running.
C
Our
only
job
is
to
keep
their
eye
out
and
you
know,
monitor
the
security
of
the
systems
and
the
type
of
course
that
are
being
done.
Some
of
the
most
interesting
work
that
I've
been
doing
over
the
last
couple
years.
It's
just
on
the
network,
infrastructure,
intrusion,
detection,
type
activities
and
scripting
yeah,
and
you
know
the
scale
that
that's
being
done
is
just
quite
mind-boggling,
but
it's
also
very
scary,
because,
as
good
as
it
is,
you
know
you're
thinking.
C
Well,
okay,
this
is
all
the
stuff
that
we
thought
about,
and
we've
got
this
overhang
over
here.
All
the
things
that
we
haven't
even
considered
know
about
so
I
think
that's
the
one
of
the
most
interesting
challenges
going
forward.
You
know
balancing
that
versus
the
desire
of
the
product
groups
to
bring
new
capabilities
quicker
and
quicker
and
and
also
you
know,
have
a
framework
or
a
platform
that
allows
us
as
artists
to
extend
it
and
yep
other
interesting
things.
You
know
yep.
A
C
C
C
A
A
B
B
In
the
past
that
was
the
let's
say,
a
one
advantage
that
we
had
is
that
everything
was
in
single
place.
So
when
things
broke
there
was
you
LS,
you
could
get
a
pretty
decent
idea
of
in
which
place
in
the
stack
things
broke.
Now
you
have
flow
that
might
do
something
in
teams
through
graph.
You
might
have
something
in
Azure
a
job.
You
might
have
function,
micro-services
things
that
you
have
front-end
in
SPF
X
and
when
things
break
that
there's
no
unified
log
across
all
of
them,
at
least
not
out
of
the
box
right.
B
So
if
you
think
about
operating
things
at
at
scale
well,
you
have
to
take
that
into
account
right
and
then
the
moment
you
you
reach
out
to
anything
external
that
is
beyond
the
control
of
the
IT.
Well,
you
have
to
take
care
of
that
a
student
who's
managing
that
security
and
so
on
and
so
forth
right.
So
you.
A
Now
we've
been
talking
way
too
long,
but
that's
fine,
a
good
discussion
and
hopefully
they're
the
people
who
are
watching
this
are
occurring
on
that.
But
let's
do
a
few
articles
and
then
we
can
touch
on
the
discussions
and
then
come
back
on
a
close-up
photo
for
this
way
now
few
articles
from
Microsoft
side.
So
this
is
from
Lincoln
Demaryius
Lincoln
is
a
prince,
becomes
a
principal
consultant.
Principal
p.m.
A
I
have
anyway
getting
confused
on
the
titles
anyway,
it
doesn't
matter
he's
a
principal
program
manager
from
from
our
development
team
but
feature
crew
and
he's
responsible
of
lists
and
libraries
and
SharePoint
Online,
and
this
relatively
new
stuff
from
last
week
related
on
document
sets
which
are
coming
now
in
the
modern,
SharePoint
libraries
and
so
the
dough.
If
you
use
the
document
sets
in
the
past,
you
were
kind
of
a
redirected
on
the
classic
experience
and
that
wasn't
the
optimal
situation.
So
finally,
that's
getting
also
modernized.
A
A
The
second
thing,
what
I
wanted
to
quickly
kind
of
a
pin
point.
So
this
is
just
an
updated
version,
quick
update
on
on
the
provisioning
service.
We
talked
about
the
provisioning
service
quite
a
few
times,
and
leuk
leuk
side
is
an
awesome
site
for
getting
dis
signs.
Then
the
provisioning
service
was
the
one
of
its
actually.
You
can
apply
these
templates
to
any
tenant,
which
is
kind
of
course.
A
So
we
did
a
update
it
release
on
this
one
last
week,
so
we
modified
the
UI
slightly
simplify
things
and
we
artist
some
of
their
random
exceptions,
which
are
there.
We
will
still
do
a
quite
a
big,
quite
a
significant
updates
on
on
the
provisioning
model,
because
right
now,
if,
if
there's,
for
example,
a
missing
app
catalog
or
something
like
that,
you
we've
ala
date
that
after
the
provisioning
has
already
started,
so
we
don't
do
pre
validation.
A
So
that's
just
that
number,
let's
say
five
or
three,
which
is
coming
in
few
weeks
where
we
actually
validate
your
environments
beforehand,
so
that
will
reduce
the
amount
of
exceptions
when
people
are
actually
also
getting
but
really
cool
stuff,
and
you
can
easily
apply
cool
templates
to
any
tenant
and
by
the
way,
if
you
don't
feel
good,
let's
say
confident
about
giving
this
application
to
sing
at
the
amount
of
permissions.
All
of
these
templates
are
available
in
akita.
A
If
a
familiar
with
get
happen,
you
can
use
BMP
powershell,
as
all
of
the
templates
are
open
source
indicated
per
the
story,
which
is
pretty
cool
now.
Moving
on
things.
Chris
O'brien
is
pfx,
isolated,
webparts,
isolation,
isolation,
isolation,
the
right
way
of
connecting
through
the
backend
API,
and
this
really
comes
down
on
what
actually
spends
talked
about
as
well
and
the
security
of
things.
So
people
tend
to
store
or
forget
about
access
tokens
and
passwords
and
user
IDs
and
the
isolated
web
part
basically
gives
you
the
capabilities
from
an
admin
perspective.
C
C
A
Yeah
and
when
GA
recently,
a
few
weeks
back
with
the
1.8
release
and
and
now
this
way,
what
it
means
is
that
your
web
part
is
technically
executed
in
an
iframe
on
a
page,
and
that
means
that
none
of
the
other
web
parts
on
a
page
can
access
your
secrets,
which
is
the
key
way
of
kind
of
a
hiding
all
right,
increasing
this
security.
From
that
perspective,
this
one
was
really
interesting
concept
from
Stephan
Bower
Stephan
had
a
really
great
idea.
A
Actually,
it's
combinations
differently,
say
a
UI
designer,
quite
often,
and
but
he's
also
clearly
coming
up
with
a
clever
ways
of
using
SharePoint
out-of-the-box
capabilities
so
and
hub
sites
and
what
he
is
basically
explaining
here
is
a
archive
hub.
So
if
you
have
a
let's
say
active
projects
and
then,
whenever
they're
active
project,
there's
no
longer
active,
associate
that
to
a
separate
website
which
will
then
automatically
apply
the
site
designs
inside
scripts
and
all
of
that
to
their
site.
A
So
then
there's
a
visual
indication
that
the
site
has
been
archived
so
really
cool
stuff
as
well
and
obviously
bigger
as
part
of
the
site,
design,
employment.
You
could
execute
complex
provisioning
techniques,
change
to
web
parts
and
extensions
of
that
or
add
a
header
which
is
saying
this
site
has
been
archived
or
sometimes
yeah.
B
B
I,
guess
guess
the
powerful
thing
about
it.
Is
that
this
side,
the
content
is
not
being
moved
anywhere.
You
don't
need
to
have
it
anywhere
in
zip.
It's
still
in
your
environment.
You
can
still
access
it
using
the
same
URL.
The
same
links
all
the
rest
in
place,
but
you
control
you.
Can
you
can
more
clearly
denote
what
is
up
today,
what
is
being
used
versus
what
is
older
and
archived
yep?
Absolutely
now.
C
A
This
is
more
around
the
status
related
on
content
type,
hop
which
isn't
quite
optimal
from
a
provisioning
perspective,
but
on
the
same
hand
on
at
the
same
time,
there's
no
proper
replacement
for
conduct
iPod
right,
because
cantata
hub
doesn't
require
any
Chasen
understanding
and
a
code
understanding
for
replicating
content
types
cross.
The
sites
in
a
town.
B
A
Fair
question:
it
all
depends
so
from
my
perspective,
if
I'm
looking
into
let's
say
creating
an
enterprise
information
architecture,
I
would
actually
provision
my
content
types
automatically
as
I
as
part
of
the
site
provisioning.
So
I
would
actually
spend
time
on
making
sure
that
that's
an
enterprise
by
the
way
of
doing
things.
Now,
if
it's
a
small
company-
and
they
don't
have
money
and
resources
to
make
it
happen,
then
yeah
yeah.
C
A
C
This
you
know
it's
an
example
of
where
you
know
the
requirements,
if
you,
even
if
they
even
existed
previously,
need
some
more
to
fit
the
deployment
model
of
the
cloud.
You
know
it's
not
appropriate
to
take
an
old-fashioned
right
information
architecture
that
used
to
work,
which
it
probably
didn't.
If
we
were
honest
about
it,
it
probably
have
issues.
You
know,
content.
A
C
A
A
It
is
it
giving
us
additional
value,
or
is
it
just
providing
additional
complexity?
So
content
types
is
a
classic.
Let's
say
if
you
have,
if
we,
if
we
take
a
short
detour
and
different,
if
you
have
a
content
types
and
then
you
have
required
fields
and
all
that
on
a
content
type,
it
makes
people
not
liking
to
upload
any
files
anymore
on
SharePoint,
which
means
because
they
need
to
fill
up
the
required
fields
and
that
causing
the
the
people
to
actually
do
something
else,
which
is
it
that's.
C
Does
it
work
in
teams?
Does
it
work
just
like
you're,
causing
the
we
needed
barriers,
and
then
you
know
also
just
on
that
all
kind
of
thing
we,
you
know
we've
gone
from
a
slight
change.
You
know
in
terms
of
recommending
how
you
would
structure
your
sites
and
site
collections
now
you
know
which
also
tries
very
heavily
into
the
into
contact
types,
get
its
own
decisions,
yeah,
so
danger
dangerous
thing
to
want
to
kind
of
replicate
what
we
used
to
do
on
prep.
C
You
know
in
this
Ennis
area,
because
the
knock-on
is
bigger
right
got
net,
which
means
we
just
spoke
about,
you
know:
does
it
make
people
less
likely
to
use
the
system?
Does
it
make
it
more
difficult,
but
also?
How
does
it
impact
these
other
things?
You
know
other
applications,
mobile
devices,
etc,
etc.
Yep.
C
A
That's
the
whole
point
of
working
through
this
article,
son
and
Mark
will
be
talking
about
the
content
types
in
SPC
and
also
in
easiest,
so
he'll
be
in
both
locations.
So
we'll
continue
that
discussion
definitely
with
mark
over
there,
and
this
one
was
from
Victor
villain
who's,
an
MCN
as
well
and
MCA
and
well.
What
we
saw
villain
isn't
actually
but.
C
A
Yeah,
so
this
one
is
around
at
the
Microsoft
team,
saps
generator,
so
this
is
a
yeoman
generator
for
Microsoft
team
saps
and
really
updated
version
around
that
one.
So
support
Microsoft
bot
framework,
an
extension,
middleware
and
themes
came
updates,
and
all
of
that,
when
would
you
use
this
vs.
SharePoint
framework.
A
A
Is
it
yes,
so
that's
kind
of
the
the
positioning
around
this
one
and
victor
is
working
together
with
teams
development
team
on
making
sure
that
this
is
up
to
date
so
which
is
really
cool.
So
now
this
one
was
from
search
luca,
related
immersive
flow
and
document
sets
while
waiting
for
modernization.
Well,
the
modernization
news
is
that
yes,.
C
A
A
The
document
sets
and
the
classic
experience
of
document
sets
with
flow
and
getting
into
approvals
and
everything
else
they
included
in
there.
So
super
cool
stuff,
so
certs
is
really
a
specialist
on
the
flow
behavior
as
well
used
to
be
a
SharePoint
guy,
and
now
it
went
more
on
flow.
What's
happening,
everybody's
leaving.
A
This
one
was
from
shower:
how
did
Google
tag
manager
global
ad
ship
went
online?
This
is
a
good
reminder,
sure
do
you
want
to
use
Google
tag
manager
and
what's
the
implications
of
that,
that's
debatable,
but
again
using
the
application,
customizer
and
then
using
the
tenant
automatic
tenant
employment.
You
can
just
by
adding
the
solution
to
the
app
catalog.
A
You
can
actually
get
the
extension
available
automatically
across
all
of
the
sites,
so,
if
you're
using
the
tenant
for
destination,
that's
both
horrifying
but
highly
convenient,
because
at
the
moment
of
the
solution
getting
deployed,
the
code
is
now
another
single
site.
It
is
actually
at
the
moment.
So
you
need
to
be.
You
need
to
aware
what
you're
actually
deploying
to
get
over
here.
Setting.
B
B
A
A
related
on
converting
SPF
expect
part
two
from
javascript
to
react
so
basically
having
a
nun
react
with
part
converted
to
a
react
implementation,
so
you
can
take
advantage
of
obviously
that
fabric
react
and
all
of
the
other
things
from
that
side,
and
this
is
together
with
Erics
cox
so
and
the
article
is
like
the
detailed
it's
detailed
entry
and
explanation
on
how
these
things
can
actually
happen
and
I
think
here
now:
that's
where
it
actually
can't
get
up
so,
but
apparently
there
was
a
few
detours
as
well.
So.
A
B
Yeah
and
I
guess
that
it
all
comes
down
to
what
what
do
you
use
right?
If
you
own
all
of
the
code
yourself,
it
might
be
easier
than,
for
example,
if
you
use
a
plug-in
that
works
in
specific
way
and
which
you
might
need
to
retrofit
to
fit
in
in
SPF
X
and
the
way
it
works
with
external
scripts,
I
mean
it
depends.
It
is
the
classic
answer
to
everything
that
we
do
anyway,
so
we're
in
a
business.
It
depends.
Yes,
everything.
A
Depends
yes,
and
this
one
was
from
David
from
alcohol
activation
upon
corpus,
search
on
a
hop
site.
So
again,
this
is
one
of
those
discussions,
but
it's
great
it's
PowerShell.
Is
it
coding?
Basically,
what
he's
doing
here
is
that
he
is
updating
the
search
scoop
on
the
sites,
which
is
the
one
of
the
new
features
which
really
is
part
of
the
CSUN
release
in
March,
which
then
had
a
plug
post
actually
or
announcement
last
week,
I
think
from
one
of
the
BMS
in
in
the
future.
A
Just
a
reminder
that
search
code
setting
is
now
out
and
you're
able
to
then
adjust
the
target
of
the
default
search
box
in
a
site
level
based
on
their
search
code
properly
and
not
on
a
tenant
level.
It's
something
which
can
be
controlled
right
now,
one
way
on
a
site
level
or
in
a
wet
level.
Whatever
we
call
this
side-swept
SP.
A
Fair
point
fair
point
now
and
this
one
just
final
points
from
prom
Decker,
absolutely
awesome,
prillie
until
he's
being
building
this
tool
for
quite
a
few
years,
but
it's
great
tool
for
accessing
site
collection
and
sites
and
lists
and
libraries
and
item
and
properties,
because
it
exposes
all
of
the
different
properties
and
settings
what
this
objects
have.
So
if
you
quickly
need
to
have
a
look
on
hey
so
what's
the
column
value
of
the
modern
page
on
this
particular
site,
you
can
go
and
have
to
get
out
really
easily
by
using
this
tool.
A
So
awesome,
awesome,
stuff,
really
great
stuff
and
here
I've
been
like
available
for
years,
but
it
keeps
on
evolving
that
and
now
apparently
there's
modern
side,
support
and
onedrive
for
business
side
support,
so
Valyria,
Kosta
cool,
absolutely
absolutely
cool,
that's
all
of
the
articles!
So
let
me
quick
back
and
remove
the
sharing
and
we've
been.
This
discussion
is
probably
operating
their
records
for
the.
A
B
There
are
plans,
and
there
are
things
that
will
hopefully
take
place
until
the
end
of
the
week.
So
the
plan
currently
is
to
release
new
version
of
the
tool
that
we
have
available
at
rank
or
the
health
check
which
allows
you
to
quickly
see
scan
a
number
of
sites
and
we
extended
to
flow
and
power
apps,
basically
to
help
you
to
understand
quickly.
B
Is
there
anything
in
my
environment
that
requires
immediate
attention,
yeah
anything
from
vulnerable
scripts
to
things
like,
like
one
of
the
things
that
we
see
a
lot
it
as,
for
example,
people
will
implement
the
whole
olive
flow
and
flows
like
they
will
start
client
ID
secret
in
plaintext
and
flow,
which
is
like
in
a
way
it's
like
yeah.
If
you
only
allow
admin
tasks,
that
is
perfectly
fine,
but
then
what?
If
you
export
that
flow
and
share
it
with
somebody
else?
B
B
Exactly
right
exactly
so,
we
try.
So
we
hope
that
we'll
be
able
to
simplify,
discovering
them
and
then
making
people
or
raising
awareness
of
what
kind
of
things
are
in
your
environment
right.
So
we
hope
that
that
will
be
available
in
the
coming
days
and
then
there
are
some
other
things
related
to
company
management
and
all
the
things
that
I
am
involved
with
so
I'm,
going
to
spend
some
time
on
that
as
well,
and
also
working
on
the
CLI
new
versions
available
and
new
commands
that
into
that
as
well.
Make.
C
C
C
C
B
C
A
That
reminded
me:
yes,
the
Monday
isn't
helping
at
all
losing
one
day's,
it's
horrible
and
there
well
one
extra
David
family
wasn't
that
horrible
anyway,
that
reminded
me,
we
actually
released
a
new
github.
Repo
I
haven't
actually
done
any
announcements,
yet
we'll
figure
it
out
and
I
need
her
to
be
here.
First,
you
heard
it
here.
First
SB
admin
scripts
is
out
actually
came
from
the
one
tribe
sign,
because
once
I've
had
requirements
for
sharing
admin,
scripts
and.
C
A
That's
a
fair
point:
we're
not
explicitly
call
it
out
on
the
PowerShell
scripts
are
not
so
sure
why
not
actually
also
have
CLI
scripts
there
and
because
I
don't
see
if
it's
a
script
to
its
works,
it's
a
script
which
works
so
as
long
as
there's
guidance
steps
on
what
about
appropriate
moments.
Regulus.
B
A
C
A
B
B
A
But
I
think
that's
it
for
this
month.
Thank
you,
spoons
for
joining
us
good
Chad.
As
always,
it's
good
to
have
the
long-term
experience
and
and
good
to
have
your
experience
and
discussions
on
the
on
many
of
the
topics
as
well
and
a
cube
Alltech
for
joining
once
again
and
we'll
come
up
with
a
new
SPT
weekly
in
a
week,
but
stopping
the
recording.
Thank
you.