![]() And this is what has been introduced with the latest announcement following the documentation. Well, that´s the standard if you don´t setup to use your own existing request process instead. You can also see that I would be able to send an additional message to the requester and then hit either Approve or Don´t approve. In my case, I am requested to buy a per user Power Automate license as I don´t have any remaining licenses in my tenant. ![]() Microsoft 365 Admin Center – License request Admin dialogĪs you can see from the visual above, if I would have licenses available in my tenant, I would have been able to select a license. I can see that in my case Amy made a request to be assigned a license and from here I could immediately work on resolving this. ![]() Microsoft 365 Admin Center – License requests (inbox) Switching heads and shoes now and stepping into the role of a Power Platform Admin again, I am opening my M365 Admin Center and take a look into pending license requests. I then press Submit request and this initiates a request. Power Autoamte – Make a license request dialogĪs shared in visual above, a dialog is presented and I can enter a message for my admin as well as select a license type that I think would best be suitable to fit my needs. In this case – or for testing purposes – let´s click on license request link above and see what´s happening. The Maker in my case can either sign-up for a trial, buy their own license or perform a license request. Power Automate Flow checker – A hint on how to solve the license issue The Maker therefore receives and error message or notification that requests to use the flow checker to troubleshoot. As in my case the Maker is only assigned an M365 E5 license with Power Automate and Power Apps seeded capabilities, this flow needs a standalone license. For a run-time experience of the flow, the Maker is enforced to have a valid license. A Maker with just an M365 E5 seeded license assigned creating a premium tagged artifact within Default environment The Maker experience – Power AutomateĪ Maker has created a premium tagged flow in above example and was able to save it. The artifact in my test cases being a canvas app that is using a premium connector (Dataverse) and a Power Automate flow that is also using a premium trigger (Dataverse) and even a premium action (AI Builder). Let´s assume you haven´t activated this new feature and a Maker created an artifact which enforces having a standalone or premium license. Admin Center License Management – Incoming or Pending requests from users Let´s start from the M365 Admin Center user interface and see where license requests without this new feature being enabled would normally end-up in. Furthermore, it simplifies Makers life as everyone now can be pointed to a customized or tailored documentation instead of using the in-built experience. It addresses the requirement of admins being in need for a customizable dialog everytime a user is enforced to have a standalone license for the run-time experience of a created artifact by a Maker inside your organization. To simplify and customize the process of Makers in your organization requesting a license that is enforced by the artifact created using premium capabilities (the app or flow tagged as „premium“ inside the Details section – License designation). Power Apps license request dialog, which can be customized now What is it good for? But let´s take a closer look so it becomes clearer for everyone. But hey, this isn´t an evil thing that causes a lot of headaches or trouble! This is for you Admins making the process a lot smoother and tailored to your needs. What was the first reactions, I got during recent customer conversations with IT teams? Right, where to block or deactivate this. Jokes aside folks, today´s article is a walk through in terms of this recent announcement. Those managing license requests in their organizations and thoughtfully considered an easy onboarding process for their Makers during an ideation & clearing process prior to creating artifacts. ![]() Today´s article is proudly sponsored by Power Platform Admins. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |