►
From YouTube: SharePoint Dev Weekly - Episode 41 - 28th of May 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.
If you want your article or sample mentioned, please use the #SPDevWeekly hashtag on Twitter for letting us know.
This video was recorded on Monday 27th of May 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:
this
is
Shep
on
dev
weekly
episode,
41.
We
do
not
have
a
clapper.
We
danced
because
I'm
calling
from
a
hotel
so
and
I
forget
about
bringing
death
with
me
I'm,
calling
from
Germany
one
lick.
You
are
calling
from
home,
yes
I,
probably
if
we,
because
this
ghost
lives
actually
during
the
time
of
the
collaborations
I
made
what
happened.
Yeah.
B
So
I
was
I
was
on
the
way
to
the
event
and
basically
for
health
reasons.
I
had
to
cancel
last
minute,
so
I
was
like
almost
there,
but
I
was
like
nope.
Sorry,
no
can
do
so.
I'm
here,
I'm
at
home,
cheering
from
the
badge
here
yeah
like
sending
my
thoughts
to
you
guys
to
break
a
like
or
not
break
a
leg,
don't
break
leg,
yeah.
B
A
B
A
A
Unfortunate
you
were
not
the
only
one
who
who
had
to
come
so
in
the
in
the
cooperation,
so
I
made
a
small
dose
the
other
late
cancellations
unfortunately,
actually
do
health
patients
response,
but
it's
only
life.
There's
just
you
never
know.
What's
gonna
happen,
no
yeah,
and
that
could
happen
for
anybody
so
but
now
I'm
out
I'm,
just
pretty
awesome
actually
and
I
can
see
if
I
can't
get
the
blur
Wayne.
B
A
B
B
A
B
A
A
B
A
So
a
well
actually
the
same
conversation
which
we
did
in
SBC
we
supposed
to
dead
keynote
in
SPC
with
just
around
the
enterprise
development
scenario,
the
latest
and
greatest
on
SharePoint
in
the
brush
development,
basically
over
there
on
and
what's
happened.
What's
the
latest
on
road
map
and
all
stuntmen
so.
A
They
will
say
we
are
executing
already
at
the
woman's.
There
say
two
classes
which
I'm
actually
part
of
as
well.
So
there's
the
kidding
solid
achievement
framework
which
had
like
40
people
signed
up.
Apparently,
your
events
are
already
way
beyond
their
getting
started
shipment
framework
and
then
they
will
say
office
365,
SharePoint,
developer
master
class,
which
we
had
140
150.
A
And
it
was,
it
was
actually
already
questions
related,
on-premises
and
SharePoint
2019,
of
course,
of
course.
Of
course,
we're
in
Germany,
that's
yeah
yeah.
It
is
kind
of
a
it's
one
of
those
classical
chances
which,
which
reminded
me
on
how
old
to
2019
is
even
so
we'll
talk
about.
She
have
one
2019
which
was
released.
When
was
the
th
Abruzzi.
B
A
B
A
That's
coming,
hopefully
proud
evolution,
so
it
is
now
what
day
is
it?
Actually,
it
is
one
day,
one
day
it
is
27th
of
May,
so
hopefully,
within
2
weeks,
we'll
have
1.9
coming
out.
If
we
can
get
our
building
pipelines
moving,
that
was
one
thing
must
be
talked
about
actually
in
SVC
as
well.
So
we
move
into
this
monthly
release
cycles,
which
is
a
really
good
thing,
so
everybody
is
actually
that
we've
been
running
with
SharePoint
framework
and
releasing
SharePoint
framework.
So.
B
A
B
Interesting
challenges
that
if
I
speak
for
myself
until
I
got
to
manage
a
product,
I
didn't
really
get
like.
How
does
it
work
and
why
would
you
have
predictable
schedule
and
releases?
And
how
do
you
go
around
things?
I
was
like
'ok.
Typically
in
projects
you
build
things,
things
are
done,
project
closes
on
your
ship
and
it's
done
in
product
you're.
Never.
B
B
A
A
And
then
I
think
well
right
now
we
are
not
yet
promising
accepted
features
on
the
monthly
releases,
but
I
think
and
get
there
relatively
soon
as
well.
In
the
in
the
best
case
scenario,
we
would
be
able
to
say
at
this
feature
and
we
would
have
a
public,
let's
say,
roadmap
and
and
kind
of
a
assumption
where
it
would
be
released
and
if
it's
not
released
on
that,
one
is
going
to
postpone
for
the
next
version.
That
would
actually
be
really
optimum,
because
then
people
will
be
able
to
see
roughly
when
something
is
happening.
Yeah.
B
And
I
guess
like
so,
if
I
compared
it
to
the
way,
we
approach
things
a
drinker
right,
we
have
a
list
of
things
we're
working
on.
That
is
prioritize
where
the
things
that
are
currently
in
progress
are
on
top.
You
know.
So
when
things
are
done,
they
just
move
off
from
the
top
and
then
the
next
thing
on
the
list
is
being
picked
up
on
and
the
same
way.
Is
you
guys?
A
A
Actually
in
Microsoft,
sir,
which
system
you
know
my
wife
or
products,
things
which
means
that
then
we're
kind
of
always
improving
what
we
have
and
improving
and
having
a
having
a
train
where
half
of
the
investments
on
on
the
engineering
and
investments
will
be
on
new
features
and
half
of
the
investments
or
below
average
will
be
on
improving
what
they
actually
have
so,
which
is
a
really
good
thing
as
well.
A
So
we
keep
on
them,
making
the
things
more,
mature
and
making
things
more
efficient
and
performance
or
ease
requirements
for
as
both
accelerations,
and
all
of
that
will
get
better.
So
yes,
which
is
a
good
thing
at
least
personally
I
call
myself
so
I'm,
definitely
not
a
perfectionist,
because
I
understand
the
limitations
but
I'm
a
improve
inist,
so,
which
is
a
great
thing
in
nowadays
in
the
industry
and
especially
how
we
work
in
Microsoft,
because
it's
all
about
improving
what
happened
so
improving
game
matters.
B
And
there
are
always
things
to
improve,
like
you
were
never
run
out
of
things
to
improve,
because
the
moment
you
ship
things
they're
alright,
because
they're
based
on
an
idea
and
I,
think
there
was
somebody
who
said
like
that.
No
plan
survives
the
engagement
with
the
enemy
in
a
way.
So
you
have
an
idea,
you
ship
it.
You
build
things
ship
it
to
mark
and
give
it
to
people
and
they're
like
oh
yeah.
But
what?
B
If
I
want
to
do
that
and
like
oh
that's,
interesting
and
then
you
need
to
wrap
on
your
thing,
because
otherwise
you
would
just
be
stuck
spinning
wheels,
trying
to
come
up
with
this
wonderful
and
100%
complete
thing.
That
would
never
be
done
because
the
moment
you
talk
the
moment,
you
show
it,
there
will
be
more
opinions
and
you
will
be
going
back
back.
Improving
improving
ship
and
people
would
not
be
able,
in
the
end,
to
use
it
at
all
right.
So
I
guess
that
being
improving
is,
as
you
say,
it
makes
sense.
B
It
makes
sense
because
people
have
needs
and
if
you
can
meet
their
needs
already
or
even
some
of
them.
Well,
that
adds
adds
the
value
already
yeah
right,
so
so
there
is
the
benefit,
even
in
that
already,
even
if
it's
not
a
100
percent
thing,
even
if
maybe
in
some
particular
edge
case,
things
are
not
really
work.
The
way
you
want
to
do
I
tell
these
are
things
that
you
can
iterate
over
time.
While
you
already
solve
people's
needs,
yeah.
B
Yes,
absolutely
interesting
thing
that
I
and
our
interesting
approach
to
shipping
the
products
that
I
heard
of,
and
maybe
you
guys
thought
about
or
the
two
that
you
can
do
it
in
a
way
when
things
are
done
their
ship.
So
you
don't
wait
a
month
when
things
are
done,
they
are
shipped
and
then
from
the
marketing
side.
The
marketing
team
decides
when
they
want
to
have
an
announcement.
Yes,
and
the
benefit
of
that
is
that
the
dev
team
doesn't
wait
for
anything
when
things
are
done,
their
ship.
They
move
on.
To
do
the
next
thing.
B
There
is
no
big
bang
for
oh
yeah.
We
have
done
these
five
things,
let's
integrate
them
into
a
release,
but
that
one
thing
was
already
done
a
month
ago
and
the
developer's
moves
no
another
thing
and
then
there's
an
issue.
So,
like
all
kinds
of
things
he
has
to
take
into
account.
What's
the
ones
that
is
really
interesting
to
that
as
well.
B
Is
that
if
you
ship
thinked
today
and
then
the
marketing
announcement
is
let's
say
in
three
weeks
or
months,
that
gives
you
three
weeks
to
gather
the
evidence
and
the
launch
basically
was
a
success
story
oak
or
case,
and
is
there
a
partner
who
uses
already
and
then
let's
lunch
with
that
as
opposite?
Do
we
have
this
new
thing
and
now
we
have
to
wait
for
everybody
to
understand
what
it
does
and
how
it's
used.
Yeah
yeah.
A
Absolutely
absolutely
makes
perfect
sense
and,
and
obviously
there's
multiple
different
ways
of
doing
that
as
well,
but
yeah
absolutely
make
sense.
No
cool
I
should
pick
out
the
articles
and,
of
course,
I'm
seen
SPC
I
think
we
have
quite
a
lot
of
slides,
actually
and
quite
a
lot
of
content
into
announcements,
even
though
we
don't
have
that
many
tabs
open
in
the
in
the
window.
But
what.
B
A
This
one
is
the
verge
article,
which
is
actually
pretty
cool.
So
year
ago,
SharePoint
spaces,
which
was
announced
and
first
demoed
in
the
SPC
2018,
got
to
be
mentioned
in
the
verge,
because
that
was
a
kind
of
a
3d
and
virtually
welded.
The
world
show
walls
and
everything
else
much
of
space,
Essaouira,
Chevron
spaces,
demos,
and
it
worked
for
about
that
to
be
really
cool,
and
now
this
year
it's
actually
open.
It's
just
the
modern
share
points
and
share
point
being
sexy,
which
is
actually
pretty
cool,
and
it's
really
really
cool.
B
Especially
when
you,
when
you
look
look
into
it
and
then
like
it,
moves
away
from
what
to
be
like
in
the
past
is
to
be.
You
know
this
like
straight
lines:
Internet
and
really
you
could
say
corporate
with
the
the
notion
or
the
the
way
we
saw
it
back
then,
back
in
the
days,
corporate
being
equity,
equal
to
Dowell,
yeah.
A
A
Absolutely
really
cool
stuff
and
putting
this
one
there
actually
reference
that
now.
This
is
actually
said
in
the
context
and
tone.
Voronezh
isn't
saying
this
in
the
context
of
the
new
Windows
terminal,
no
friends
for
Windows
terminal,
but
I,
don't
quite
understand
how
Windows
Terminal
is
actually
called,
but
hey.
That's.
B
A
B
B
B
A
A
So
if
people
have
been
joining
on,
our
community
calls,
they
are
absolutely
aware
of
the
fact
that
we
have
application
page
as
much
of
themes
tabs
now,
g8
sparked
1.8.
We
also
talked
about
the
ball
in
the
blood.
First,
talk
about
the
provisioning
experiences
that
this
was
really
cool,
though
man
provisioning
services
is
well,
it's
still
in
preview,
but
it's
available
and
we're
improving
that
significantly
and
even
on
the
on
the
shipment
patterns
and
practices,
provisioning
and
engine.
A
You
are
able
to
actually
provisional
store
much
of
teams,
so
you
can
actually
create
a
threat
or
ten
on
template
with
multi
site
collections,
hub
site
configurations
and
themes
and
themes,
tabs
and
tabs
point
it
back
to
the
SharePoint.
So
now
you're
able
to
then
stamp
those
to
the
individual
tenants
awfully,
and
we
are
you
really
interesting
discussions
related
on
probationary
service.
Future
I
mean
SPC,
but
I
can't
disclose
any
of
that.
Now.
That's
the
t-shirt,
then.
B
A
Developer
experience
is
craft
tool,
Keith
mentioned
Windows
community
toolkit
we're
looking
into
also
getting
finally
to
see
some
dotnet
standard
out.
It
wasn't
announced,
yet
it
wasn't
them
out
yet,
but
it's
it's
being
worked
on
and
the
the
real
it's
a
bummer
that
it's
taken
too
long
to
get
it
out
and
and
really
the
key
challenge.
What
we're
having
with
that
one
is
the
impact
of
that
to
our
build
systems
rather
than
actually
making
it
out.
So
it's
not
the
fact
that
it's
getting
a
season
in
the.net
standard
format.
B
Maybe
there's
interesting
thing
because
we
talked
in
in
a
past
like
it
was
brought
up
on
a
few
occasions
like
why?
Wouldn't
you
open
source
see
something's
like
yeah,
because
it's
auto-generated
from
services-
yes,
I
I,
know
what
it's
like,
okay,
but
now
that
the
build
part
might
be
an
issue.
Maybe
that
would
be
actually
might
made
sense
to
extract
that,
because,
like
I
can
imagine
that
from
server
side
om
you
generate
code
and
that
code
needs
to
be
built
right
and
then
it
won't
be
build
towards
dot
nothing
in
that
core.
A
A
B
A
A
We'll
see
which
stirs
day
but
a
gist
and
then
a
lightweight
component
is
coming
out
on
GA
in
1.9.
We'll
talk
about
some
of
this
stuff.
When
we
get
to
the
roadmap
slides
now
there
was
a
good
article
host
of
my
stuff
craft
signed
and
which
is
actually
collecting
all
of
the
bunch
of
craft
sessions
from
was
built,
so
built
was
three
weeks
ago.
A
It's
been
two
weeks
ago
whatever,
and
there
was
quite
a
few
Microsoft
craft
sessions
there,
the
the
SharePoint
that
was
actually
only
one
SharePoint
session
and
because
the
SharePoint
had
SPC
then
coming
up
on
the
following
week.
So
that's
why
it
didn't
have
that
much
present
in
in
Bill
good
cute
list
of
things
and
by
the
way
you
definitely
there's
at
the
keynotes
really
cool
stuff.
A
Russia's
history
purchase
is
basically
the
director
Bulow's
reports
to
Satya,
but
in
my
management
chains
of
Russia's
office,
365
and
Microsoft
365,
so
really
cool
style
response
good
and
then,
if
you
community
articles,
so
this
one
is
to
wait
two
weeks
old
because
we
recorded
the
previous
one
on
slightly
earlier
because
of
their
space
a.
But
this
is
from
Cameron
Cameron
had
a
really
nice
top
sites,
Fiedler
tips
for
developers-
and
this
is
really
around.
A
This
one
was
from
Mark
Lee
Anderson
shape
when
people
search
right
from
the
intranet
homepage.
This
is
actually
pretty
awkward,
be
honest.
It
took
me
a
while
to
actually
figure
out
why
what
am
I
actually
reading
here,
but
if
you
use
the
search
box
and
you
try
to
search
search
anything
like
Mark.
In
this
case
the
results
are
missing
people
search
which
is
like
why?
Why
is
it
missing?
A
B
A
B
A
Yes,
indeed,
moving
on
on
things,
this
is
from
David
wahoo,
he's
kind
of
a
hover
about
this
he's
dead,
the
IT
bro
kind
of
guy
for
SPF
X,
there's
a
good
kind
of
a
reminder
on
the
allowing
how
to
allow
external
user
starts
as
custom
solutions
on
SharePoint.
The
derivative
challenge
point
default
is
that
the
external
users
do
not
have
permissions
to
execute
the
client-side
component
assets
in
that
catalog
was.
B
Actually-
and
that's
that's
not
only
for
external
astride,
because
to
be
honest,
I
could
do
today.
There
was
a
while
back
already.
I
was
at
a
customer
who
ran
a
20-19
farm
on
pram
and
they
had
exactly
the
same
saying
right.
They
created
a
bunch
of
size,
two
experiments
with
and
they
couldn't
access
the
apps
like
what.
B
Why
not
well,
it
turns
out
because
in
order
to
see
anything
SP
effects
on
a
page,
everybody
in
the
whole
company
has
to
have
read
access
to
Catalan
because
yeah,
because
it's
client-side
scribbs
and
to
get
pulled
in
from
that
side
or
runtime
yeah.
But
it's
something
that,
though
that
was
never
the
issue
or
never
the
case
in
the
past.
But
now
they
do
need
that
yeah.
A
But
it's
a
it's
a
good
reminder
how
it
actually
works
and
getting
absolutely
you
need,
and
it
makes
perfect
sense
when
you
think
about
how
things
are
actually
working,
because
the
actual
JavaScript
assets
and
component
and
manifests
and
everything
else
are
actually
stored
in
the
catalog
site
collection.
So
the
users
to
be
able
to
show
the
information
for
the
users
they
need
to
have
access
there.
So
we're
able
to
render
what's
being
on
the
page.
So.
B
A
Absolutely
so
and
we're
looking
into
having
first
of
all
an
API
for
creating
site
collection,
so
you
can
programmatically
create
that
and
make
sure
that
it's
and
probably
defined,
but
there
was
a
long
debate
internally
on,
should
we
actually
create
an
app
catalog
for
every
single
tenant,
or
should
we
create
that
on
demand
using
an
API
as
needed,
and
the
conclusion
was
actually
on
demand
with
an
API
as
long
as
there's
an
API?
For
now
there
isn't
but
we're
implementation.
A
A
A
How
would
I
build
is
the
Holy
Grail,
like
I've,
said
so
many
times
on
the
SharePoint
Online,
but
they
have
good
video
on
that
one
for
four
and
a
half
minutes
kind
of
a
summary
on
how
things
actually
work
and
I
think
he's
actually
he's
doing
live
demo
here
as
well,
so
explaining
how
things
are
working
even
in
the
level
of
the
access,
token
translation.
So
you
can
actually
say
look
in
this
case.
Let's
see
if
we
can
actually
pinpoint
here
this
access
token
is
no
scopez
on
this
one,
but
basically
how
that?
A
A
Before
when
he
was
telling
Microsoft,
because
we
might
actually
change
some
of
the
access
token
internals
at
some
point,
so
it's
not
about
you-
can
actually
have
a
look
on
inside
of
taxes
to
again,
but
it
might
actually
be
changed
slightly
on
the
future
as
well
yeah,
depending
on
our
interest,
because
we
on
access
ready
and
the
implementation
this
one.
It
is
yeah
huge.
A
Then
here
Susan
Handley,
cute
summary
in
the
computer
world
around
Microsoft
other
announcements
on
a
sharepoint
conference
2019
despite
a
few
actually
roadmap,
slides
coming
up
as
well
but
Susan
is,
is
raising
here,
ship
and
home
sites,
which
is
an
interesting
basically
having
a
landing
page,
organizational
landing
page.
So
to
say
right
now
we
start
with
a
having
a
one
and
in
future
there
might
be
multiple
home
sites
in
in
the
SharePoint,
and
so
so.
A
A
Might
call
it
a
hub
of
hub
hub
of
hubs.
It
is
a
communication
science
which
has
been
promoted,
the
BAS
home
science
and
basically,
then,
when
you
click
SharePoint
link
anywhere
in
the
in
the
tenant
you'll
land
on
the
hub
site,
a
home
site.
If
that
has
been
configured,
then
there's
a
few
other
things
there,
as
well,
so
kind
of
a
behind
the
scenes.
There's
happening
some
some
plumbing
behind
on
that
setting
for
the
photo
communication
site,
the
communications
riders
home
site
and
therefore
it
will
get
certain
capabilities.
A
And
that's
actually
that's
do
we
have
a
good
picture
here
because
we
do
enforce
as
well.
So
that's
kind
of
an
contoso
portal.
Mock-Up
I,
don't
think
this
is
a
real
site.
I
I,
don't
think
so
it
might
be.
No,
it
looks
pretty
okay,
there's
Microsoft
search
in
the
top,
because
that's
now
getting
promoted
on
the
on
the
suit
level,
then
here
on
the
right
side,
we're
able
to
see
also
vertical
sorry,
horizontal.
A
B
A
Absolutely
now
sue
is
also
raising
here,
the
shipment
start
page.
So
this
is
basically
a
personalized
experience
then,
and
that
that's
the
organizational
landing
page
and
then
the
start
page
is
basically
a
personal.
Your
my
recent
documents,
my
national
zoomit,
my
featured
links,
my
recent
documents,
my
saved
URLs,
Oh,
super
close
right
and,
and
then
news
sites
and
your
personal
sites
and
there's
like
recent
science
and
tested
science
and
then
following
sites
very
better.
A
It's
so
who
knows
what
has
influenced
what
on
these
things?
It
is
what
it
is
basically,
some
steroids
so
undo
and
redo,
with
porns
ability
to
command
duplicate
bed,
parts
on
a
bait
on
demonic,
URL
and
trust,
anchor
links,
house
layout
recommendation
or
spades
truck
and
roll
immunities
on
the
page
to
basically
track
and
drop
images
on
the
bait
and
then
poof.
They
will
be
exist
organization.
How
about
documents
and
baits
templates
really
important
thing
as
well.
Right
now,
the
base
templates
are
basically
site
collection
level.
A
So
what
we
wanted
to
do
quickly-
and
it's
actually
spent
a
few
minutes
on
this
and
so
Susan
Hannah
Sue's,
also
collected
all
of
the
roadmap
slide
so
to
the
screenshot
or
follow
the
road
most
lines
so
which
are
from
the
sessions
and
so
actually
pretty
cool
way
of
collecting
what
was
announced
in
spc
cross,
different
areas,
and
in
here
we
concentrate
on
the
SharePoint
homepage.
A
new
scheduling
analytics
feature.
Bates
API
is
in
the
pipeline
as
well.
We
talked
about
that
for
quite
a
long
time
as
well.
A
So
you're
able
to
swap
any
site
collection
to
the
route,
no
more
than
site
collections
at
the
root
of
your
tenant,
which
is
actually
pretty
cool
which,
by
the
way,
makes
perfect
sense.
When
you
think
about
it,
you
can
modernize
an
existing
route
side
from
the
root
Talent,
but
many
of
our
customers
have
already
had
their
own.
Whatever
custom
communication
sites
in
a
different
URL,
so
they're
basically
raising
their
hand,
saying
yeah,
but
I
would
like
to
have
this
one
in
route
yeah,
we
got
them
yeah.
A
That's
the
side,
swap
capability,
damn
cute,
let's
see
what
else
do
we
have
here?
New
scheduling,
modeling
or
content
publishing
required
metadata
support
in
pages
fluent
for
SharePoint
experiences.
This
relates
from
fluent
framework,
which
is
the
fabric
fabric.
Ui
is
going
to
be
a
adopting
the
fluent
framework
and
that
will
then
be
more
visible
in
the
into
SharePoint.
B
A
Spot
nice,
what
else?
What
else?
What
else
first
columns?
We
actually
talked
about
that
when
I
was
already
with
part
announcements,
a
lot
of
cost
of
their
content,
services
and
insight.
This
is
the
this
is
relatively
new
team,
which
is
now
starting
to
push
out
more
and
more
capabilities
as
well.
Video
verticals
video
they're
transcriptions,
more
than
minutes
metadata
field
controls.
Finally,
getting
some
lock
that
one
as
I
improved,
Enterprise,
Content,
ID
publishing
model
sounds
interesting,
so.
B
A
Want
to
push
out
content
types,
content
types
cost
libraries
in
your
channel,
which
makes
perfect
sense
yeah
across
Microsoft,
365
stacking
next-generation,
taxonomy
services
in
top-of-mind,
really
cool
stuff
in
there
in
the
pipeline
as
well.
So
things
are
moving
and
August.
Everybody
would
like
to
have
all
of
this
already
available,
but
hey
course
I'm
its
Wilton
coming.
It
will
be
coming
Shepard
theme,
science
and
business
apps
really
around
the
colon
formatting
and
number
fields,
column,
formatting,
improvement
hub,
showing
approval.
A
So
if
you
want
to
turn
your
site
collection
to
a
hub,
they
might
been
approval
process
on
that
which
is
cool
additional
column
formatting.
That
is
lightweight
form
customizations,
which
is
actually
an
interesting
statement.
You
might
ask
what
does
that
mean
and
I
have
no
idea
quite
wait
for
customization
well,.
A
A
A
A
A
And
this
there's
no
going
interesting
discussions
or
bills
internally
in
our
engineering
as
related
on
the
power
absent
flow,
it's
absolutely
brilliant
functionalities,
but
then
they
do
to
be
able
to
use
them.
You
need
to
have
an
additional
license
and
that's
actually
then
causing
some
headaches
for
some
customers
and
so
and
we
need
to
make
sure
that
the
SharePoint
works
also
without
them,
rather
than
always
demanding
power-ups
and
flow
behind
the
scenes
right
right.
B
A
B
A
Absolutely
absolutely,
and
then
we
kept
safe
for
later
insecure
examples
and
good
example.
This
doesn't
just
mean
that
this
would
work
only
in
the
one
try
for
business
side.
Obviously,
it
means
that
it
will
be
implemented
in
the
document,
libraries
and
SharePoint
as
well,
because
one
deriving
SharePoint,
the
engineering,
is
actually
the
same
in
engineering
so
and
we
used
the
exact
same
underlying
storage
system.
Therefore,
whatever
we
implement
in
here
will
be
available
across
the
sharepoint
collaboration
sites
as
well,
so
really
cool
yeah.
A
Footer
layout
options
branded
icons
to
on
SharePoint
experiences,
updated
theming
designer
ship
on
home
sites
in
mobile,
hop
improvements,
branding
branding,
branding
its
template
organizational
sets
what
a
lot
of
good
stuff,
absolutely
good,
stuff,
good
stuff,
additional
extra
site
script
actions.
So
one
thing
what
we
actually
showed
in
the
SPC
was
how
to
extract
site
designs
from
a
real
site,
an
actual
site,
so
you're
able
to
actually
extract
the
lists
and
columns
and
content
types
in
a
site,
designer
script
form
and
from
an
existing
site.
A
The
only
only
kind
of
a
downside,
so
scientists
absolutely
really
about
brilliant
functionality.
It
has
smelled
the
kind
of
the
challenge
that
it
doesn't
yet
at
least
support
packaging
itself
as
a
zip
file
or
open
XML
file,
because
the
what
I
mean
with
that
one
is
that
when
they
extract
stuff,
if
you're
extracting
also
image
use
potential
and
future
like
the
load,
so
I'd
everything
else.
You
have
then
multiple
assets
which
you
need
to
make
sure
that
they're
they're
contained
in
the
same
folder.
A
Now
the
BMP
provisioning
engine
actually
export
stuff
optionally
as
a
BMP
file,
which
is
an
open
XML
file.
So
it
has
actually
all
of
the
assets
inside
of
the
of
the
of
the
path
John
yep,
let's
see
where
we
go
there
and
there's
an
interesting
internal
discussion
on
some
site,
scripting
site
designs
as
well:
Microsoft
Research
released
2ta
in
built
two
weeks
ago,
big
announcements,
my
substance
adi
in
craft
coming
hour,
is
available.
Now.
They're
gonna
absolutely
already
use
that.
But
it's
really
cool
interesting.
A
B
B
It
says
exactly
what
it
is,
but
I
mean
I
think
that,
from
from
the
very
first
time
that
it
was
announced,
I
was
like
okay,
so
search,
and
then
you
said:
ok,
so
everything
they're
supposed
to
graph
has
to
be
old
data
for
compliant,
and
then
you
see
search
with
all
the
different
parameters
and
filters
as
like.
Oh,
how
will
that
ever
well
here?
It
is
yeah
exactly
yeah.
A
A
Macaws
monsoon
who's.
Turning
now
the
marks
of
search
team
in
Oslo
yep,
we
will
be
responsible
of
the
UI
extensibility
model
as
well
just
learning
the
right
model
there.
We
had
actually
really
interesting
discussions
related
on
that
as
well
kind
of
options
and
and
and
thinking
what
would
be
the
right
direction
on
there
like,
like.
We
actually
have
already
discussions
related
on
polar
scope,
which
would
be
okay.
So
what
if
Engineering
will
provide
api's
and
then
we
will
provide
the
you
is
experience
s
copy
completely
open-source
using
the
community
exactly.
B
I
think
that
is,
that
is
the
ultimate
challenge.
When
you
build
a
product
that
is
extensible
yeah,
but
because
you
don't
want
to
do
only
the
api's,
because
customers
who
don't
have
capacity
to
build
anything
well,
they
want
to
see
something
yep.
But
then
you
don't
want
to
build
too
much,
because
what
you
build
well,
you
might
not
have
the
capacity
across
the
board
to
keep
that
going,
revving,
keeping
that
up
to
date
and
so
forth
and
so
on.
B
A
The
partner
ecosystem
is
also
very
important
for
us,
but
then-
and
we
don't
want
to
kind
of
a
rocket
about
too
much,
but
then
we
need
to
provide
native
UI's
as
well
and
capabilities
so
and
I
think
well
a
few
more
advanced
compliance.
This
is
more
on
the
administrative
side
of
the
story.
Shredded
chat,
review,
classification
assistant,
legal
stuff
data
investigations,
label,
analyst,
GA
advanced
a
discovery,
solution,
okay.
A
This
is
now
from
my
slides
from
the
Deaf
keynote,
so
quick
summary
on
things:
smaller
pulley
systems,
integration,
improvements,
general
availability
of
micro,
components
of
a
sudden
upon
framework
talked
about
that
one.
Already
in
the
past
content
security
policy
being
implemented.
She
has
metal
core
open
sourcing
human-generated,
which
is
the
interesting
discussion
as
well.
What
does
it
actually
then
mean
for
the
SPF
XP
and
B
yeoman
generator
Posse
top
of
my
action.
A
I
think
it's
pretty
clear.
What's
gonna
happen,
yeah
additional
content,
extension
for
modern
pages,
so
this
one,
which
we
talked
actually
on
Lucas
and
John's,
John,
Higgins,
Jason
I-
think
it
was
on
Wednesday
afternoon
if
I
remember
correctly,
so
we're
introducing
and
additional
extensibility
for
morning
pages
are
able
to
overwrite
the
footer.
A
So
the
article
box
content
folder
you're
able
to
replace
that
with
your
own
implementation,
not
such
the
floating
footer,
but
the
actual
content
you're
able
to
also
override
the
navigation
top
navigation,
which
is
precise,
so
you're,
basically
able
to
say
but
forget
about
thought
of
the
Box
navigation.
Let
me
render
my
navigation
or
then
you're
able
to
actually
provide
navigation
notes,
so
you're
able
to
override
and
basically
say,
hey
I
wanna,
my
extension
is
responsible
of
providing
the
navigation
notes
and
then
you're
able
to
figure
out
where
the
notes
are
coming
by
yourself,
which.
A
A
Saturdays,
so
true,
absolutely
but
yeah.
So
this
this
stuff
is
getting
implemented.
We
talked
about
this
in
SPC,
we'll
probably
talk
about
a
lot
of
this
stuff
in
doc,
coming
community
course
as
well.
So
on
Thursday
this
week,
we'll
talk
about
this
PC
announcement
so
spoke
together
with
community.
It
is
a
public
holiday.
Actually
it
is
Thursday
in
Finland,
but
a
what
you
wouldn't
do
it
for
community
hey
and
store
story
and
s
perfect
solution
still
getting
worked
on.
Unfortunately,
don't
have
a
timeline
on
that
one
developers
and
partners
public
search
API.
B
A
Roadmap
for
learning
pathways
to
learning
plan,
formally
known
and
cost
of
learning,
so
there's
going
to
be
modeling
while
supports
that
one.
This
is
basically
for
thriving
adoption
of
office
365.
It's
it's
really
cool
solution
which
is
using
the
provisioning
service
to
get
itself
provisioned,
and
then
it
try.
It
helps
to
tribe
adaption
of
office,
365
nice
and
then
there's
two
very
important
notes:
roadmap
for
you
for
path,
friendship,
one
desire:
there
is
no
roadmap.
Well.
A
B
The
interesting
thing
is
that
if
you
look
at
that,
so
from
what
I
hear
from
discussions
that
we
have
with
customers,
is
that
it's
not
as
as
much
as
as
to
where,
because
you
can
think
of
it:
okay,
so
sharpens
iron,
a
workflow,
dads
flow
or
logic
apps
and
an
info
path
that
would
be
power
apps!
That's
the
market
is
clear.
The
way
there,
however,
is
not
because
both
are
being
put
so
accept,
accept
the
logic.
B
Apps
flows,
em
power
ups
are
very
much
makers
tools
and
as
such
right
now,
there
is
no
way
to
automate
that
there's
no
way
to
do
things
like
automate
connections
or
automated
deployment
or
automate
things.
So,
if
you
think
about
company-wide
set
of
forms
and
workflows,
there
is
no
easy
way
to
move
from
one
to
another,
like
we,
for
example,
can
do
with
the
portal
experiences
we.
A
B
Tooling,
available
that
allows
us
to
assess
and
modernize
them
yeah
we
don't
we
don't.
We
don't
have
pulling
for
that,
but
there's
also
no
api's.
That
would
allow
us
to
build
to
learn.
We
can
identify
what
we
have
we.
We
can
assess
complexity
of
that
then
what
yeah
and
then
we
can
create
flows
and
powers,
but
we
cannot
get
them
to
flows
and
power-ups
and.
A
B
A
A
We
are
we
work
with
the
enterprise's
for
a
more
than
a
decade
already,
so
we
know
kind
of
the
requirements
we
we
gain
from
the
on-premises
with
farm
solution,
with
massive
set
of
API
s
and
opportunities,
and
then
we're
now
kind
of
a
exposing
additional
additional
capabilities
in
SharePoint
Online
in
more
less
a
restricted
way
internal
level,
but
in
a
safe
way
as
well.
But
all
the
time
looking
in
this
from
an
enterprise
perspective,
not
just
from
a
makers,
perspective
and
I,
think
that
really
the
difference
here
is
the
flow
and
power-ups
organization.
A
They
are
getting
that
feedback
and
they're
looking
into
that
absolutely
and
they
will
more
and
more
adjust
their
behavior
to
be
on
the
enterprise
direction,
but
they
they
basically
came
from
the
maker
side
right.
They
built
ins,
user
capabilities
and
and
and
use
a
treatment
operations
rather
than
making
sure
that
the
enterprise
coordination
is
available
and.
B
B
They
cannot
just
forget
everything
they
have
and
just
drop.
All
of
that-
and
it's
like
you
know
what
tomorrow
we're
gonna,
build
everything
from
scratch
and
power-ups
and
flow,
because
there's
none
of
that's
that's
not
how
things
were
there
are
years
of
years
of
investments
in
tooling
in
guidance,
documentation,
processes
that
depend
on
these
forms
and
workflows,
and
you
cannot
just
drop
them
and
say
you
know
what
the
company
will
stop
for
half
a
year
until
we
rebuild
everything
from
scratch.
Yeah.
A
Absolutely
it's
almost
like
the
Minimum
Viable
products
for
companies
as
well.
They
need
to
actually
adjust
the
new
ways
of
doing
a
piloting
first
and
then
adjusting
and
all
of
that,
but
I
think
momentum
is
there
absolutely
there's
lutely
and
because
the
tooling
is
really
great,
absolutely
the
power
amps
and
the
flow
momentum
is
crowing.
Absolutely
yeah.
B
A
B
Yes,
yeah
I
write
all
the
Microsoft
cloud,
even
because,
because
with
that
you
can
even
do
things
in
Azure
yeah
and
you
can,
if
you
have,
if
you
have
the
connectors
you
can
reach
out
to
that
beyond.
Even
that,
so
you
could
be.
You
could
be
thinking
about
like
where
there
is
the
automation
inside
office.
Clients
you're,
like
you,
can
you
can
do
the
macro
or
scripts
like
these?
Are
the
macros
on
the
web
in
your
company
flow?
So
we
can.
A
A
B
A
A
I'll
be
back:
oh
man,
okay,
oh
and
I
need
to
go
back
on
the
lips
which
isn't
too
far,
which
is
good
and
so
and
I
it's
too
bad
that
you
were
unable
to
join
because
things
don't
have
yet
but
we'll
catch
up.
Well,
there's!
This
is
almost
like
spending
time
on
the
same
room
anyway,
so
yeah!
This
is
how
it
works.
Yeah,
so
will
will
definitely
meet
you
later
on
and
we'll
keep
on
Belize
meeting
up
on
the
video
side
anyway,
for
those
who
are
watching
and
thank
you
for
watching
additional
one
again.