►
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 week they were joined by Joanne Klein (NexNovus).
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 11th of February 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
A
Yes,
but
that
means
that
we've
been
able
to
actually
deliver
a
half
a
year
constantly
every
single
week,
a
new
episode,
that's
pretty
cool
in
the
future
as
well.
Now
this
week
we
once
again
have
a
visitor
here
and
we
were
able
to
get
you
on
on
the
on
the
course
so
John
we
talked
about
the
fact
that
you're
not
necessarily
and
necessarily
and
developer,
but
who
are
you
and
then
we
can
talk
about?
Why
did
we
want
to
have
you
in
the
course
sure.
B
Hi
everyone,
I'm
Brian,
Klein
and
I-
am
a
office
365
and
SharePoint
consultant,
so
I
run
my
own
company
working
for
customers
that
are
some
of
them
are
already
on
SharePoint
Online,
something
just
some
just
wanting
to
get
there.
So
I
am
really
focused
on
SharePoint
site
and
information
architecture,
I'm,
usually
the
SharePoint
kind
of
expert
on
the
team.
So
they
look
to
me
for
guidance
how
to
layout
the
sites
but
I'm,
really
an
end-to-end
person,
so
lots
of
migrations
I
work
through.
So
everything
from
how
do
you
set
up
your
sites?
B
What
kind
of
information
architecture
do
you
do
there
once
we're
in
SharePoint
Online,
then?
Okay?
How
do
we
kind
of
light
up
some
of
those
services
on
that
side?
Just
so,
we
can
reap
the
benefits
of
that
migration
in
the
first
place.
So
that's
mostly
my
focus
and
I'm
pretty
kept
pretty
busy
doing
that,
because
there's
lots
of
organizations
you
know
in
that
space
wanting
to
get
there
these
days,
yeah
and.
A
Obviously,
from
a
developer
perspective,
it's
kind
of
interesting
this
is
ship,
wonder
weekly,
but
then
we
wanted
to
have
John
here,
because
actually
the
number
one
thing
to
understand
as
a
developer
is
what's
available
out
of
the
books,
so
you
wouldn't
actually
implement
exact
same
capabilities
or
you
wouldn't
forcefully
been
to
SharePoint
or
Microsoft
365
platform
2
direction
where
it
doesn't
actually
should
be
where
it
shouldn't
be
going
right.
Yes,
well,
the
queue
you
had
a
awesome
statement
related
on
this
one
yeah.
C
Well,
yeah
exactly
so
so
the
power
today
is
also
the
power
not
to
death.
As
you
say
right,
it
is
it's
all
about
the
thing
like
knowing
when
is
the
right
time
and
what
is
the
right
place
to
build
stuff
and
where
you
should
be
thinking
about?
Well,
maybe
there's
a
reason.
Things
are
the
way
they
are.
Maybe
there
are
things
that
are
coming.
Maybe
if
there
are
things
that
I'd
love
to
build,
just
don't
make
sense.
B
That's
why
I
think
it's
really
important
for
someone
on
the
team
to
kind
of
be
on
top
of
what's
coming
down
the
pipe
what's
there?
So
when
we
get
these
requests
on
the
team
and
we
always
get
them,
you
know
I,
don't
like
how
thing
X
works
or
looks.
Can
you
change
it?
Please
so
I
like
to
have
kind
of
a
pragmatic
discussion
with
our
developers,
because
they'll
always
want
to
jump
in
and
build
that
thing.
Of
course.
B
Sometimes
it's
it
doesn't
make
sense
to
do
that
either
you
know
the
they
juice
is
worth
the
squeeze
or
on
the
pipe
or
whatever.
The
reason
is,
but
you
really
need
someone
to
keep
on
top
of
that.
So
you
aren't
spending
all
of
your
cycles,
developing
things
that
really
aren't
giving
that
business
value.
Let
them
focus
on
the
things
that
they
really
need
to
focus
on.
You
know,
custom,
modern
web
parts
or
whatever
that
is
so.
C
C
B
I
mean
I
I,
think
every
team
needs
to
have
one
of
those
and
looking
through
it
through
that
lens
is.
Does
this
really
make
sense
and
yeah?
It's
it's.
You
kind
of
have
to
challenge
that
request
in
the
first
place,
you
know
many
of
legitimate
business
requests
and
you
have
to
you
know,
respond
accordingly,
but
it's
it's
to
kind
of
know
which
which,
which
is
the
right
response,
is
takes
a
little
bit
of
experience
to
know
kind
of
which
oven
you
to
take
from
there
yeah
yeah.
Now.
A
If
you
think
about
larger
projects
which
I
used
to
do
before
I
joined
engineering,
we
used
to
have
a
business
analysts
in
the
in
the
project
and
the
role
of
business
owner
supposed
to
understand,
really
what's
coming
and
and
ones
out
of
the
box
and
all
of
that,
and
then
we
used
to
have
the
Technical
Architect,
which
was
then
the
fun
which
is
actually
understanding.
Then,
okay,
we
we
business
on
others
said
that
this
is
not
coming.
We
should
implement
that
so
the
Technical
Architect
was
responsible
of
defining.
A
I'm
a
big
believer
personally,
and
this
might
be
something
which
we
don't
want
to
even
record.
No,
no!
It's
fine,
but
I'm
a
big
believer
in
every
single
larger
project.
We
should
have
the
final
one
dictator
dictator
in
quotes,
who
has
to
find
our
ruling.
So
it's
you,
you
can
have
a
team
of
let's
say:
15
developers
or
10
developers
doing
whatever
they
want
to.
A
A
B
A
A
Right
now,
as
well,
I,
don't
think
well
we're
recording
this
on
Monday
11th
of
February
and
what
was
this?
No
McCadden,
our
second
myth
snow
doesn't
ride
on
Sunday,
so
most
likely
today
on
Monday.
There
won't
be
that
many
people
on
campus
and
then
Tuesday
when
this
goes
live.
Hopefully
the
weather
is
heading
to
the
right
direction,
but
we'll
say
the
Seattle
just
haven't
been
built
for
the
snow.
It.
A
Now,
let's
actually
jump
Chester,
we
were
and
conscious
about
a
time
as
well,
let's
jump
on
the
articles
and
then
come
back
on
and
have
a
discussion
in
there
as
well,
and
let's
have
a
discussion
on
the
topics
related
on
the
articles.
So
let
me
share
my
screen
and
continue
the
discussion
from
there.
It
is
that
screen,
hopefully
I
got
it
right
and
I.
Think
I
got.
C
A
That
would
be
actually
interesting
why
appointment
anyway,
you
can
probably
see
what
I'm
sharing
right.
Okay,
we
have
ship
on
Saturday
Cairo
coming
up
on
this
week,
so
February
16th,
it
is
February
11th,
it's
insane
how
fast
time
is
flying.
So
it's
a
Valentine's
Day
is
on
this
Thursday
right.
We
will
have
a
ship
framework
chef
on
Freddie
:
that
day
as
well.
So,
let's
see,
if
you'll
have
some
special
announcements
there
we'll
see
any
way
shape
and
Saturday
Cairo
is
in
this
Saturday.
A
So
that's
for
those
who
are
in
area
and
are
interested
on
going
over.
It
is
apparently
in
Microsoft,
Egypt
and
location
is
in
here
speakers
and
sponsors
and
sessions
listed
on
the
SPC
Evans
site
now
on
Jones
topic.
So
this
one
was
your
a
new
article
which
came
out
yesterday.
Actually,
yes,
10th
of
February,
and
this
was
around
anatomic
aphasia
upon
my
creation,
and
it
was
really
a
info
craft
which
you
created
related
on
what
to
do
and
what
not
to
do.
B
This
is
based
on
many
migrations
that
I've
done
working
with
organizations,
so
we
kind
of
take
a
team
by
team
approach
and,
although
it's
not
cookie
cutter,
there's
some
basic
things
that
we
do
over
and
over
and
over
again-
and
this
kind
of
is
my
recipe
for
success.
If
you
will
so
I
think
my
biggest
takeaway
on
the
plan
stage
is
this
is
not
a
lift
and
shift
approach.
B
So
you
know
you
meet
with
teams
you
we
have
a
team
of
a
boat,
I
want
to
say
eight
people
working
on
on
one
of
my
main
clients
right
now:
migrating
everybody's
shared
network,
folder
location
into
SharePoint
Online
in
some
kind
of
a
collaboration
space,
so
we're
going
team
by
team
meeting
with
them.
You
know
kind
of
identifying
their
processes
that
they
have,
and
this
is
where,
eventually,
when
we're
into
SharePoint
Online
and
some
of
the
other
features
than
office
365,
we
start
bringing
in
the
devs
to
you
know
automate
some
of
those
things.
B
It
might
be
everything
from
you
know
some
of
the
Microsoft
flow
or
power
up,
or
it
might
be
something
more
advanced
than
that.
So
this
is
the
planned
stage,
is
kind
of
where
we
go
through.
All
of
that
and,
of
course,
design.
This
light
information
architecture,
but
just
you
know
the
underpinning
for
everything,
and
you
need
to
have
somebody
on
your
team.
B
So
the
execute
phase
is
basically
just
that
you
know
technical,
let's
get,
let's
get
whatever
content,
you
have
into
SharePoint
Online,
so
you
know,
there's
lots
of
really
good
migration
products
on
there.
I
know
Microsoft
has
one
of
their
own
as
well,
and
just
you
know
a
few
things
you
can
roll
blocks.
You
can
run
into
on
that
step,
but
all
in
all,
that's
that's
a
pretty
streamlined
process
and
it's
you
know,
figuring
out
also
what
you're
building
for
the
team
so
is
that
are
Microsoft
teams?
Is
it
a
Yammer
group?
B
B
This
is
where
the
security
in
the
protection,
the
retention
controls
come
in,
which
is
you
know,
one
huge
aspect.
One
big
benefit
to
being
an
office
365,
but
then
you
start
to
be
able
to
automate
some
of
those
business
processes
so,
like
I,
said,
have
a
conversation
with
your
dev
team
and,
and
you
know,
walk
through
those
business
processes
and
figure
out
what
what
you
can
do
for
the
team
yeah
and
you
know,
of
course,
incorporating
training
and
adoption.
That
part
never
ends
that
kind
of
thing.
B
So
it's
basically
my
do's
and
dont's
on
those
three
steps
and
I.
You
know.
Certainly,
it's
not
inclusive
because,
as
you
probably
are
both
aware,
every
migration
is
unique
and
usually
has
some.
You
know
one-off
scenario.
That
makes
it
so
it's
not
really
a
cookie
cutter
approach
and
you
have
to
deal
with
that.
But
by
and
large
these
are
you
know,
three
steps
that
I
take
that
are
successful
in
the
long
run,
yeah.
C
A
Are
enormous
as
well,
and
so
it's
much
better
to
actually
concentrate
on
getting
the
content
over
getting
the
the
content
and
the
collected
the
site
collections
and
the
kind
of
a
day-to-day
work
over
did
you
see
happen
tonight?
Yes
and
I
like
the
fact
that
it's
it's
not
a
take
a
little,
take
a
lift
and
shift
approach,
because
I
think
the
fact
that
a
lot
of
customers
are
moving
the
model,
whether
it's
just
sudden.
A
B
A
What's
kind
of
cool
about
that
approach,
what
we've
seen
as
well
is
that
a
lot
of
the
customer
organizations
which
are
then
in
on-premises
start
being
jealous
about
those
themes
which
actually
moved
over
and
they're
willing
to
do
manual,
my
creations
so
they're.
Basically,
that's
I
can
go
there
as
long
as
I
get
this
stuff
over
and
I'm
sure
there
are
exceptions
if
you
have
a
massive
site.
A
Collection
and
I
need
to
actually
do
automation,
all
stat,
so
sure,
but
it's
it's
yeah
it's
it's
always
one
of
things
and
like
I
said
it's
it's,
it's
always
a
challenging
thing
and
there's
always
customer
specific
things
and
there
will
never
be
a
clicker
button.
My
creation,
because
it's
SharePoint
unfortunately.
B
That's
right:
it
also
gives
an
opportunity
which
I
always
do
is
to
flatten
up
that
architecture.
You
know
usually
it's
if
you're
coming
from
a
SharePoint,
on-prem
environment,
usually
or
even
another
online
environment.
If,
if
you,
you
know
done
a
deep
hierarchy
where
you
have
sub
sites,
a
migration
like
this
is
an
epsilon.
Yes,
yep.
A
Revisit
the
designs
revisit
the
customization
revisit
the
requirements
and
because,
quite
often
those
requirements
were
defined
five
years
ago
and
based
on
business
models
which
might
have
evolved
already
so
going
through
that
as
well
and
also
I,
like
the
fact
that
you're
raising
here
the
next
as
well,
because
really
now
that
you're
investing
on
SharePoint
Online
you're
already
paying
for
the
SharePoint
Online
and
office
365.
So
why?
Wouldn't
you
actually
take
advantage
of
all
of
the
capabilities
which
are
available?
So
really
really
really
do
not
forget
about
understanding.
C
The
only
thing
that
I
want
to
add
is
that,
especially
when
you
think
about
apps,
there's
often
the
notion
like
okay,
we
headed
on
premises.
So
we
have
to
have
that
online
too.
But
then
you
might
realize
that
just
because
it's
there
doesn't
really
mean
it's
being
used,
and
that's
often
one
of
the
things
that
people
like
inside
in
into
are
things
actually
being
used.
A
C
A
When
was
it
a
few
years
back,
we
were
executing
these
programs
where
we
helped
our
dedicated
customers,
I
move
from
the
farm
solutions
to
adding
model
and
as
part
of
that
transition,
there
was
an
interesting
discussions
with
largest
companies
in
the
world
because
they
were
in
dedicated
platform
where
we
used
to
support
farm
solutions,
but
then
they
were
forced
to
move
to
adding
model
and
and
having
that
discussion
on,
no
no
have
you
considered.
This
is
actually
used.
Have
you
considered
the
value
of
this
capability?
Oh,
we
have
no
idea.
C
That's
actually
the
whole
point
right,
because
I
think
it
is
much
more
complex
to
get
the
usage
and
to
understand
the
value.
Then
just
just
to
say
you
know
what
we
had
this
it
kind
of.
Does
that
so
let's
write
the
spec
and
then
we
will
estimate
the
time
and
effort
to
do
it,
and
then
we
know
exactly
how
much
time
it
cost
and
then
we
can
do
it
as
otherwise
you
just
like
sit
and
plan
and
try
to
think
okay
is
it
being
used
who's.
C
A
Absolutely
cool:
it's
a
really
really
good
blog
post
sharing
the
learnings
as
well,
and
not
obviously
I
like
to
look
for
it.
So
not
necessarily
super
super
long
because
then
all
those
long
ones
are
guilty
if
they're
kind
of
a
catalog
off-
and
this
is
how
you
actually
make
stuff
happen.
But
this
is
providing
significant
amount
of
value
with
the
screenshots,
not
a
screenshot
as
a
picture
and
I
can
imagine
that
you
have
a
conference
sessions
related
on
this
content
as
well.
Right.
B
A
We're
still
on
the
journey
of
getting
customers
to
the
shipment
online.
Yes,
there's
some
massive
views.
It's
and
it's
growing
use
it,
but
still
a
lot
of
people
who
are
still
in
on-premises
and
and
looking
into
moving,
and
that's
why
we
are
also
investing
on
the
my
Croatian
platform
in
in
exercise
and
the
tooling
as
well
and.
C
B
For
sure,
that's
that's
where
the
value-add
comes
in,
for
why
you
went
there
in
the
first
place
and
that's
usually
what
your
executive
team,
the
the
group
that
has
sponsored
the
move
in
the
first
place,
are
really
looking
for.
Right,
like
our
data
will
be
much
more
secure
or
you
know
we
can
mitigate
risk
by
having
you
know,
retention
applied
across
your
content
or
whatever
the
thing
is
so
there's
lots
of
things.
You
need
to
kind
of
be
working
on
once
you
get
there
yep.
A
Yep
cool
awesome,
article
and
awesome
contents
absolutely
to
consider
now
moving
on
the
other
articles
as
well.
So
let's
actually
code
is
true.
We
did
a
sub
selection
of
again
developer
oriented
topics,
so
this
one
was
from
Thomas
Burman
SharePoint,
Online,
PMP,
PowerShell,
provisioning
using
flow
and
Asha
automation
sounds
insanely
technical,
but
basically
what
it
is
is
that
it's
it's
using
the
site,
designs
and
slide
scripts
and
then,
if
that's,
not
a
sufficient,
then
we're
extending
that
using
the
the
PMP
provisioning
engine
just
out
of
curiosity
Ron.
B
B
A
So
this
one
is
say
a
point
one
article,
but
this
is
explaining
really
well
on
step
by
step,
what
you
need
to
do
tomato
to
extend
to
site
designs
and
side
scripts
and
then
using
the
BMP,
provisioning
engine
and
I
think
it's
actually
using
the
latest,
which
means
to
be
and
be
tenant
templates
in
the
end
which
well
it's
applying
BMP
provisioning
template
to
the
actual
site
so
which
is
relatively
because
set
up
what
customers
are
doing
when
they
need
to
do
something.
What
the
site
designs
do
not
yet
support.
A
So
obviously
we
recommend
people
to
script,
but
then
you
were
able
to
fall
back
on
the
on
the
BMP
models
and
the
BMP
provisioning
engine
if
your
business
requirements
are
different
than
what
is
supported
out
of
the
box,
now
slide
designs,
the
side
script.
This
is
kind
of
an
interesting
discussion.
Is
that
is
that
development?
Or
is
that
it
a
pro
or
what
is
it?
Because
it's
JSON
definitions
right?
So
it's
for
something.
C
C
A
And
we've
been
pretty
successful
in
that,
so
that's
pretty
cool,
so
I
have
to
say
this
well
back.
Was
it
in
2009
or
whenever
2009-2010
first
time
what
I
meant
mark
Cashman
was
in
Amsterdam.
It
was
ignite
2010
the
training
where
we
actually
introduced
the
PowerShell
first
time
for
SharePoint
so,
and
that
was
an
interesting
movement
from
SDS
ADM
to
the
power
shop.
A
C
A
B
A
Luckily,
all
of
that
is
fully
automatic
in
sharepoint
online
nowadays
right,
so
you
have
to
worry
about
anything.
It's
just
magically
up
and
running
on
its
its
own
and
indeed
well.
Obviously,
there's
lot
to
be
configured
after
that
still
so
the
business
hasn't
really
gone
away,
but
still
yeah.
Now
moving
on
on
things,
this
one
is
relatively
new,
so
this
came
out
yesterday
as
well.
A
We
talked
about
the
3m
intranet
and
we
realized
that
the
3m
internet
actually
is
using
dom
injections
and
dom
injection
basically
means
that
it's
you're
hacking,
the
HTML
in
the
page,
because
you
couldn't
achieve
the
business
requirements
or
the
UI
printing
requirements,
using
whatever
capabilities
microsoft
is
providing
for
now,
and
that
was
a
kind
of
a
discussion
on.
Is
it
acceptable?
A
You
can
do
money,
but
you
can
relocate,
for
example,
search
box
to
somewhere
else
in
the
UI.
But
is
it
actually
works?
Well?
Is
it
something
which
you
really
want
to
do,
because
then
every
single
Monday
or
every
single
Wednesday
or
Thursday?
When
we
push
out
new
versions
of
SharePoint
Online,
you
need
to
go
and
double
check
that
you
guys
are
still
working
or
the
what?
C
A
The
rails
on
rails,
but
it
means
that
we
give
you
the
extensibility
points
where
we
allow
that
this
is
what
you
can
do,
but
don't
do
anything
else
and
we
are
missing
some
placeholders
we're
missing,
still
some
extensibility
points
which
we'll
be
adding
in
the
future.
Absolutely
so
that's
one
of
the
things
what
we're
investing
on
this
spring
anyway,
a
good
article
around
that
gray
area
discussion
now.
The
second
second
article
around
subscription
side
designs
from
Mott,
and
this
is
really
around
what
they,
what
they
are
and
how
they
actually
work
and
what's
being
exposed.
A
So
here
we
have
a
custom
site
designed
visible
and
which
then
Associates
to
decide
scripts
and
called
a
Christmas
template
in
this
case,
so
you
ascertain
attachments
trader
or
a
Satana
test
minister
can
define
what
are
the
templates
which
are
available
for
your
sites
and
how
do
we
make
them?
How
do
you
save
them
and
all
of
that
using
then
PowerShell
to
your
channel?
A
So
quite
nice
introduction
on
the
topic
itself,
Koot
moving
on
on
things
from
search
a
SharePoint
framework,
development
tips
predefined,
your
imports-
and
this
is
really
around
the
picture-
actually
tell
us
that
quite
nicely.
So
that
looks
ugly.
That
looks
nicer
right,
so
we're
basically
just
referencing
creating
an
alias
and
referencing
to
the
path.
C
Well,
I
mean
Douglas
is
one
but
I.
Think.
On
the
other
hand,
from
the
practical
point
of
view
you
could
say
when
you
move
things
around
in
the
example
above,
you
will
need
to
adjust
all
of
these
paths
whereas
below
you
have
an
alias,
you
change
it
in
a
single
place
and
it
applies
consistently
across
the
whole
code,
so
yeah,
it's
all
for
that.
Yep.
A
And
this
one
quite
nice
like
so
it
shows
to
both
it
shows
the
source
and
then
there's
another
alias,
which
is
the
hello
world
components
so
down
this
way.
If
you
move
all
of
the
components
in
your
solution
to
another
folder,
you
can
just
update,
alias
yeah
and,
like
I
said
so,
make
sense,
make
sense.
So
absolutely.
A
Moving
on
on
things,
Chris
Kent
has
been
showing
quite
a
lot
of
list.
Formatting
tips
he's
an
awesome,
developer
and
SPF
X
as
well,
and,
and
he
can
present
anything
pretty
much
fun.
The
list
formatting
has
kind
of
a
fallen
on
the
hands
of
Chris
and
he
loves
that
and
he's
been
doing,
the
recurrent
demos
in
the
bi-weekly
SharePoint
deaf
community
possible
as
well,
which
is
around
what
was
it
it's
the
warhorses
every
single
time,
which
is
a
common
theme
common
theme.
A
Basically,
what
this
blog
post
is
all
about
is
around
a
new
actions
which
are
available
so
index
off
and
we
were
able
to
then
do
rules
and
rendering
rules
related
on
the
index
of
entry,
which
is
really
useful.
So
we're
able
to
basically
then
do
an
indication
is
the
certain
text
available
and
slightly
weird
use
of
a
terminal.
It's
a
stable.
He
did.
A
The
additional
actions
to
lowercase
is
there
as
well.
He
directed
them
on
this
one
in
the
last
community
call
as
well
and
there's
a
video
on
that
one.
It's
gonna
be
released
tomorrow,
Tuesday,
actually
12:00
or
February.
So
that's
pretty
cool
as
well.
Now
moving
on
again
on
topics
list
people
table
on
web
part.
So
this
is
around
custom
building
a
custom
web
part
which
is
then
showing
a
pivot
table
from
I'm,
not
gonna,
say
this
well,
dick.
What's
a
schwa
mandus.
A
A
Yeah,
that's
good,
so
this
one
is
a
basically
a
custom
web
part
rendering
than
a
people
table.
In
this
case.
It
is
also
in
the
teams
inside
of
the
team's
tab
so
because,
as
part
of
the
SharePoint
framework
1.7
forward
and
from
1.8
in
GA
you're
able
to
implement
any
customers
well
web
part
be
exposed
using
the
Microsoft
teams
as
well.
Well,
technically,
I!
Wouldn't!
A
Actually
let
me
rephrase
that
you're
using
SharePoint
framework,
which
will
be
renamed
to
something
else,
maybe
office
traces
to
our
framework
at
some
point
to
build
a
solution
and
then
we're
able
to
expose
that
in
teams
or
as
a
bit
parking.
So
so
you
decide,
is
it
a
a
teams
tab
or
is
it
a
bit
part
or
is
this
or
or
is
it
a
single
page,
a
single
part,
a
page
in
the
future,
which
is
something
which
I'm
gonna
show
this.
A
C
A
Is
it
a
worthwhile
of
having
a
custom
web
part
here
or
is
it
out
of
the
box
quick
chart
web
part
good
enough
for
the
scenario?
What
are
we
doing
so,
although
I
said
that
doesn't
have
a
people
table
available,
but
still
so?
What
is
the
main
thing?
Why
you?
Why
are
you
exposing
these
things?
That's
the
why
question
yeah.
C
A
Data
because
of
the
data-
yes,
but
why
is
the
data
there
where's
the
data
coming
next
article
for
a
new
work
on
change
to
Luke
options
and
rest
API?
So
this
is
something
relatively
new.
The
change
to
Luke
options
were
rolled
out
worldwide
last
week.
Was
it
for
technical?
Was
it
for
the
preview?
Tenants
John.
Do
you
remember
we
roll
out
at
this
last
week?
Is
it
for
worldwide
availability
or
is
it
for
target
release
I.
A
Anyway,
they're
no
kidding
no
target
is
released,
and
then,
if
there's
no
surprises,
then
the
DGA
are
relatively
soon
so,
and
this
relates
on
the
on
the
header
and
the
header
sizing
and
the
background
and
navigation,
and
what
Anup
has
done
is
basically
reverse
engineered.
The
wrist
calls
which
out
of
the
box
capabilities,
are
using
to
set
these
things
we
haven't
documented.
Technically.
These
rest
api
is
looking
into
potentially
doing
that,
so
there
will
be
officially
supported
as
well
unless
their
document
that's
technically.
A
The
future
crew
can
change
the
API
implementation
and
that's
that's
always
the
challenging
things
so
because
that
might
break
whatever
you
are
building
under
I
stayed
behind
so
but
anyway,
it's
working
through
the
different
options
in
rest
now
be
schizophrenic
at
the
debugging
SPF
x2
from
a
Yannick.
So
this
is
really
around
the
fact
that
you're
able
to
guidance
on
how
do
you
set
up
chrome,
debunking
against
multiple
profiles?
A
I
wasn't
aware
that
you
can
actually
do
this,
and
this
is
really
cool
so
that,
because
I
at
least
have
like
25
different
profiles
in
my
chrome
answer-
and
this
is
relatively
long
article,
but
it
really
goes
down
on
the
on
the
fact
that
how
do
you
do
this
in
practice?
How
do
I
modify
your
default
settings
and
and
launch
options,
and
all
of
that
so
really
really
cool
core
stuff?
And
then
the
final
here
before
I
go
back
on
the
closing
discussion.
A
This
was
a
from
a
haseen
relatively
or
haven't
seen
him
actually
blocking
and
I.
Think
it's
a
new
blocker
which
is
great
as
well,
and
a
SPF
X
in
its
gallery
webpart
and
providing
the
source
source
for
this
one
as
well.
So
there's
a
taxonomy
based
filtering
for
the
web
part
as
well.
There's
the
search
on
it
as
well,
and
then
the
source
code
is
available
as
well,
which
is
really
cool,
cool,
couch
that
sits
for
now,
and
we
probably
missed
plenty
of
nice
articles
what
community
is
building.
We
do
apologize
on
that.
A
C
C
A
B
Working
with
a
couple
different
clients
this
week,
I'm
doing
more
migrations,
Marteen
migrations,
we're
actually
working
building
a
project,
template
project
site
template,
so
we're
just
trying
to
decide
if
the
requirements
will
allow
us
to
stick
with
site
scripts
and
site
designs
or
if
we're
going
to
have
to
go
into
p
information,
exciting,
exciting.
It's
pretty
cool
yeah,
so
yeah
that
and
really
I
don't
have
any
upcoming
travel
plans
except
for
MVP
summit.
I
would
just
be
stoked
about
that'll,
be
awesome
and
then
I'm
speaking,
of
course,
at
Short
point
conference.
A
B
A
C
C
So
last
week
we
had
a
new
released
new
beta
release
of
the
Eli
we
had.
Eight
PRS
was
like
really
cool
to
go
through
and
then
we're
looking
at
some
more
things
like,
for
example,
the
other
there
week
we've
seen
that
there's
no
ability
to
create
Microsoft
teams
teams
based
on
templates,
so
that's
also
it
seems
ability
and
I
wonder
how
does
that?
Compare,
for
example,
do
side
design
side
script?
Is
that
a
similar
approach
or
not?
What
do
they
do?
There
I'm
going
to
learn
more
about
that
yeah
yep.
A
That
was
I
think
it
was
released
to
preview
last
week.
Analyst
mistake:
that's
that's
a
good
point.
That's
they
that's
something!
What
we're
looking
into
doing
in
the
PMP
provisioning
templates
tenant
provisioning
templates
as
well,
so
having
a
capability
of
being
able
to
define
that
I
want
a
provision,
also
teams
and
these
channels
and
these
tabs
and
pointing
them
back
on
the
SharePoint
site,
which
is
getting
provisioned
from
the
template
as
well,
and
so
that
you
can
actually
create
a
name
to
end.
Microsoft
well.
A
A
A
Is
true,
even
though
it's
the
basics,
but
that's
fine,
that's
fine,
and
we
need
to
refresh
your
little
documentation
in
a
way
which
is
always
fun,
and
so
it's
it's
something
which
we
absolutely
need
to
do
now
that
the
SPF
excuse
it
is
off
the
roof,
and
people
need
to
have
simply
reliable
tutorials
to
learn
how
to
do
stuff
absolutely
make
sense.
Now
we
still
have
few
minutes
bonding
related
on
documentation.
A
B
B
B
I
I
think
that's,
maybe
the
niche
that
me
and
many
others
are
filling
in
the
actual
soprano
how
to
use
case
examples
of
how
some
of
this
stuff
is.
You
know,
can
be
deployed
in
your
own
organization,
so
I
think
that
kind
of
fits
in
that
middle
zone.
You
know,
yes,
you
can,
you
know
technically
implement
it
this
way,
but
how?
How
should
you
design
it
and
what
are
some?
You
know
ways
you
can
roll
that
out
in
your
organization.
B
C
I
wonder
I
wonder
to
what
degree
it's
easier
for
non
Microsoft
people
to
do
it
because
it
depends
it's.
So
there
is
no
one
way
to
do
things
at
that
degree.
So
as
such,
you
can
give
your
opinion,
but
being
being
the
Microsoft
I
you
we
don't
have
we
don't
want
action
guidance,
it
applies
to
everybody
and
you
cannot
do
it
simply,
but
it.
A
Makes
sense
and
I'm
throwing
this
one
out
there
and
then
I
can
close.
Wouldn't
it
make
sense
for
us
as
a
Microsoft
to
kind
of
a
fund
and
afford
where
we
actually
start
collecting
all
of
the
solution
designs
as
a
sub
one
source,
I,
don't
know
well,
that's
first
would
be,
but
trying
to
find
the
right
MVP
is
trying
to
find
the
right
people
and
trying
to
define
kind
of
the
high-level
governance
and
solution
design
in
that
level
as
well.
Some
of
that.
A
Would
make
sense,
but
it's
I
think
that
there
is
a
missing
link
and
that
we
tried
them
adaption
even
more
significantly
in
the
SharePoint
Online,
so
people
understanding
what
you
can
actually
do,
not
yes,
technical
details,
yeah
what
I
think
that's
it
for
this
one!
So
thank
you
John
for
joining
us
and
and
raising
the
importance
of
solution,
designs
and
governance
and
everything
else
and
keep
on
doing
that,
because
I
think
that
is
really
the
key
for
the
success
of
SharePoint
Online
as
well.
Awesome.