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Posted by on Nov 20, 2015 in Development, Skype for Business® (Lync®)

Office 365 Unified API is now Microsoft Graph, generally available

Office 365 Unified API is now Microsoft Graph, generally available

Back in August I blogged about the Office 365 Unified API, bringing together all the various APIs that cover access to the Office platform. This was interesting because Rob Howard (Program Manager, Office Extensibility Team) mentioned that eventually the APIs for Lync and Skype would also be joining this platform as well:

“The APIs for Lync and Skype will be integrated into this [Office 365 Unified API] structure very soon too.”Rob Howard

Today, at Connect() the Office 365 Unified API was made generally available, and now has a new name, Microsoft Graph.

Today-at-Connect-1

There’s a new website - graph.microsoft.io making a pretty bold claim taken right out of Lord of the Rings:  One Endpoint To Rule Them All.

graph

The intent is pretty clear. Give developers one place to authenticate and then offer access to all the different Office APIs in a standardized way. It makes a lot of sense. Microsoft also call out 3 distinct advantages:

  • Unified Microsoft API endpoint for accessing the capabilities of the Microsoft cloud.
  • Unified access to data living in the Microsoft cloud.
  • Unified access to intelligence and insights coming from the Microsoft cloud.

Today you can access data about:

  • Users
  • Files
  • Messages
  • Groups
  • Events
  • Contacts (personal)
  • Mail
  • Calendar
  • Devices

You can also Preview (explore):

  • Notifications
  • SDKs
  • People
  • Organizational contacts
  • Office Graph
  • Planner, OneNote, Converged Auth. flow support, OneDrive Files and Outlook.

Start Today

  • Start coding—Visit graph.microsoft.com to get all the documentation, code samples, SDKs, graph explorer and much more.
  • Sign up—Visit office.com and click the Sign Up button to join a vibrant and growing community of developers building solutions for Office 365.
  • More on Office Dev—Visit office.com/getting-started to get started with Office development.

 

Written by Tom Morgan

Tom is a Microsoft Teams Platform developer and Microsoft MVP who has been blogging for over a decade. Find out more.
Buy the book: Building and Developing Apps & Bots for Microsoft Teams. Now available to purchase online with free updates.

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  1. 2015 – a year in review | thoughtstuff | Tom Morgan - […] transitioning into a real productivity platform are key. As a developer the introduction of the new Unified API shows…
  2. Microsoft announced they will launch WhoBot for Microsoft Teams, your new company assistant | The thoughtstuff Blog - […] “sales”. Once the phrase is broken up like that it’s possible to go to Microsoft Graph and query across…

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