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Microsoft 365 Blog
2 MIN READ

Introducing the first Microsoft Fluid Framework experiences in Outlook and Office.com

Dan Zarzar's avatar
Dan Zarzar
Icon for Microsoft rankMicrosoft
May 19, 2020

Collaboration in the workplace is evolving and is more important than ever. At Microsoft, we are focused on solving customer problems and transforming the way you work together in your organizations. At Ignite this past year, we announced the public preview of Fluid Framework for enterprise customers and a private developer preview. This new technology is designed to make collaboration adaptable, flexible, and focused by breaking down the barriers between apps.

 

To deliver on the right experiences for our customers and to ensure they work well together, we have been continuously gathering feedback from companies, developers, and end-users. Our customers have told us the value of Fluid Framework lies is in its ability to make current work tasks simpler while unlocking new value that is relevant to their work scenarios. We are on a journey that is just starting to bring creative solutions to common workflows and content needs.

 

As a next step, we are excited to introduce the upcoming preview availability of Microsoft Fluid components. Right from an email in Outlook for the Web, create connected components that allow you to express your ideas and solve business problems. Fluid Components come in many forms – tables, charts, task lists, and more. Easily insert a wide range of components right into emails and chats. The permissions and access are handled automatically, and the data is easy to use and find later.

 

Because Fluid Components stay updated no matter where they are hosted across Office apps, the information stays updated and relevant. But, unlike a document, a Fluid component is "a little atomic unit of productivity" and fully rendered inline. You do not click on a component and go to another browser tab. You see the entire component in context and can immediately start editing.

 

 

 

These Fluid components are a mere instantiation of what is possible with Fluid Framework: an early exploration of this notion of collaboration moving beyond a single document to teams working together across apps on a shared output. Over time, Microsoft’s Fluid Framework will continue to evolve as we build more components and enlighten more apps to support components, such as Teams.

 

We are still at the early stages of this journey, but we are giving our customers a peek at how Fluid Framework change the way they collaborate for the better. Continuing to provide feedback helps us ensure we build solutions that resonate with our customers and create collaborative experiences for the future of work. These experiences will be available in preview of those with a Microsoft 365 enterprise license in the next few months, starting with Targeted Release.

 

If you have not yet tried it, check it out at fluid.microsoft.com.

Updated May 06, 2021
Version 2.0

15 Comments

  • Dan Zarzar How is the fluid framework going to fit in with the rest of the Microsoft ecosystem?  For example, is data within the common data service going to be able to be available as a source for applications using the fluid framework?  Is there a plan to replace or upgrade the connectors infrastructure with connectors into the Microsoft ecosystem that are fluid enabled?  Can you provide some examples of how to create a Microsoft Graph based solution using the fluid framework?

  • PDostiyar's avatar
    PDostiyar
    Bronze Contributor

    some of the great updates from yesterday's announcement that comes under my attention there will be tons of them go Microsoft Build !!

    • Project Cortex
    • Microsoft to open source Fluid Framework
    • Project Reunion (Unify Win32 and UWP Apps)
    • Windows Terminal 1.0
    • Sidebar in New Edge
    • Teams Related
      • Microsoft lists
      • Powerbi and Powerapp integration
      • Teams templates
      • Teams Bots and App development with teams using Visual studio etc
  • bogdanstar's avatar
    bogdanstar
    Copper Contributor

    This fancy presentation is so far from reality that it became borring. Every year the same thing. 

     

  • wroot's avatar
    wroot
    Silver Contributor

    Another post or pretty presentation. Where is the real life usage examples? Is it still so far in development that you don't have any? Like when i will be able to say copy a graph from a spreadsheet from OneDrive and paste it into email and then see it automatically refreshes live in an email reading pane when someone updates the numbers? Or even update the numbers directly from this graph in an email? One year, two years from now?