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Democratizing RPA with Power Automate Desktop

You're reading from   Democratizing RPA with Power Automate Desktop Boost your productivity by implementing best practices for automating repetitive desktop processes

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803245942
Length 308 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Peter Krause Peter Krause
Author Profile Icon Peter Krause
Peter Krause
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Getting Started with Power Automate Desktop 2. Chapter 2: Using Power Automate Desktop and Creating Our First Flow FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Editing and Debugging UI Flows 4. Chapter 4: Basic Structure Elements and Flow Control 5. Chapter 5: Variables, UI Elements, and Images 6. Chapter 6: Actions for UI Automation 7. Chapter 7: Automate Your Desktop and Workstation 8. Chapter 8: Automating Standard Business Applications 9. Chapter 9: Leveraging Cloud Services and Power Platform 10. Chapter 10: Leveraging Artificial Intelligence 11. Chapter 11: Working with APIs and Services 12. Chapter 12: PAD Enterprise Best Practices 13. Index 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Power Platform and related services

In Chapter 1, we learned that Power Automate Desktop is a part of Power Platform. With this direct relationship comes a unique advantage that can be used in conjunction with the other members of the Power Platform family. In the previous examples, we saw that a UI flow connects to another application based on specific use cases, or browser automation is used to retrieve information remotely. By using Power Platform, this scenario of outbound connections can now be extended to an inbound scenario – for example, a UI Flow can be called automatically from outside and do its work. In this respect, PAD can close the gap between cloud and local networks and thus ensure an interconnected process flow.

To gain a bit more understanding of this concept and how all this fits into the Microsoft ecosystem, I want to explain what all this means at a high level. The following figure shows the conceptual structure of the Microsoft cloud:

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