Forum Discussion
Chris McNulty
Microsoft
Oct 31, 2016GA: Microsoft PowerApps and Flow
Today, as we announced on the Office Blogs, we are proud to celebrate the general availability of Microsoft PowerApps and Flow. These solutions represent the present and future of our ambition to re...
- Nov 30, 2016I'm confused by your response. What has MS discontinued in O365 without an upgrade path? SPD still works fine and the WFs it creates will continue to work for many years.
Nov 24, 2016
It might be the rollout is not finished for your tenant...E1 plans are eligible to have Flow: https://flow.microsoft.com/en-us/pricing/ If the problem continues in some days, open a ticket
PhilineVon
Nov 24, 2016Steel Contributor
This just feeds into the same discussion elsewhere, staff are let loose on features they should'nt have access to. Thanks, but no thanks.
- Chris McNultyNov 28, 2016
Microsoft
I've just added another section to the FAQ to cover DLP. We've had a few inquiries about how an admin can restrict the ability of users, for example, to use Flow to move enterprise files from OneDrive to Dropbox. This is covered above.
- Tim CreanNov 29, 2016Iron Contributor
Chris,
We are an EDU customer and have disabled PA and Flow licenses for now. We need to develop communications for end users and also check for Accessibility issues in the new features before they can be rolled out as an Enterprise feature in O365.
However, some of our SharePoint Online users (with Designer and above permissions) still have access to create Flows and PowerApps. My question relates to the Admin centers for PA and Flow. We are bound to have some usage of PA and Flow from within SPO lists, but it appears that my team (as O365 global admins) cannot access the Flow or PA Admin centers to create DLP policies, etc.
Do we need to purchase some Plan 2 licenses for Flow and PA in order to access the Admin center?
Thanks in advance,
Tim