Azure DevOps (Server) had Mermaid support for a long time. Unfortunately that support was limited to the Wiki functionality. This means that if you had markdown files somewhere else in your repo; for example as part of your readme.md file or an architecture decision record(ADR), any mermaid diagram inside these files was not rendered. Some extensions exists in the Visual Studio marketplace that tried to solve this, but when using these extensions I noticed that none of these extensions were bug free and all had limitations or caused problems with other features inside Azure DevOps. With the December 2025 release of Azure DevOps, you no longer need a 3th party solution as this feature is finally available. Create a mermaid diagram in any .md file: And the preview tab will now nicely render your diagram: Nice! More information Markdown Syntax for Files, Widgets, Wikis - Azure DevOps | Microsoft Learn Azure DevOps Server Release Notes - Azure DevOps Server & T...
Last week I shared my understanding of how capacity works in Microsoft Fabric. I just hit publish when I got a message that I exceeded my Fabric capacity (again). Time to open the Fabrics Metrics dashboard I introduced in my last post about Fabric and see who is the culprit: I opened the Compute tab and hovered over the top item in the list. Turns out that Copilot is eating up a lot of my capacity. Whoops! I decided to disable copilot for this data warehouse. Therefore, I opened up a query in the data warehouse and clicked on the Copilot completions item at the bottom of the screen: This opens the configuration settings for my data warehouse where I can disable the completions: If you want to disable Copilot completely, you can do that at the tenant level : Remark: If you are still confused on how Fabric capacity exactly works, I found this great post by Tom Keim where he compares CU usage to watts: Just like electricity, where we’re billed by k...