What is the Microsoft Power Platform?

Power PlatformI’ve been posting about working with Power Automate in general and using it with Business Central for a while now, but I’ve never really explained the Power Platform, of which Power Automate is a part (although I did introduce Power Automate itself).

The Power Platform is a low-code platform for rapidly building customised end-to-end business solutions. Power Platform includes four main products, which can be used individually or together:

Power AppsPower AutomatePower BIPower Pages

  1. Power Apps – allows apps to be created which can be run on a browser or mobile device, they can be used by internal users.
  2. Power Automate (formerly Microsoft Flow) – automation of tasks and activities acorss numerous services using integrated or custom connectors.
  3. Power BI – business intelligence solution which provides interactive data visualization BI tools to help users visualize and share data and insights across their organization.
  4. Power Pages (formerly part of Power Apps until 2022) – secure, secure, enterprise-grade, low-code software as a service (SaaS) platform for creating, hosting, and administering modern external-facing business websites.

While Microsoft bill all parts of the Power Platform as low-code, I think that developers, or at least people with experience in programming, will find the logic patterns required to build flows easier to manage than someone without experience.

Certainly with Power Automate there are development principles which should be followed, such as Application Lifecycle Management which requires the use of solutions, separate environments for development, testing and production and use of child flows.

The other areas of Power Platform are very similar; organisations which allow a free for all in Power Platform are storing up a lot of trouble for the future.

New Functionality In Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central 2023 Wave 2: Power Pages Support via Business Central Virtual Tables on Dataverse

Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business CentralThis post is part of the New Functionality In Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central 2023 Wave 2 series in which I am taking a look at the new functionality introduced in Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central 2023 Wave 2.

The fifth of the new functionality in the Adapt faster with Power Platform section is Power Pages support via Business Central virtual tables on Dataverse.

Power Pages support will enable both anonymous and authenticated external users to perform create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations on Business Central tables that are available as virtual tables in Microsoft Dataverse.

Enabled for: Users by admins, makers, or analysts
Public Preview: Nov 2023
General Availability: –

Feature Details

In many commerce and collaboration scenarios, external users may need to participate in processes that involve Business Central data, such as bidding or onboarding, even if they are not Business Central users. With anonymous access via Power Pages, external users can perform operations on Business Central tables without signing in. Authenticated access via Power Pages requires external users to sign in to perform operations on tables or rows that are accessible to them. Business Central admins can select only the necessary operations, tables, and rows to be enabled for anonymous or authenticated access by external users.

Power Pages support also enables authenticated access by internal or existing Business Central users, similar to authenticated access via Power Apps or Power Automate. Microsoft are excited to announce the preview of this feature and always appreciate your feedback and suggestions.

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