

If you are a Webex App user, we recommend you use the RSS bot. Copilot will work alongside Microsoft 365 customers in two ways: First, it is embedded in the Microsoft 365 apps people use every day Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams and more. To access the RSS Feed for each individual service, click the icon next to the service(s). To access the RSS Feed for incidents, click the icon at the top right of the Status page. Teams had a Twitter connector until they foolishly decided to retire it February 2020. The users can choose an RSS reader of their choice and subscribe. There's a twitter feed with Microsoft 365 service incidents: Maybe you can use Power Automate and post recent tweets to that channel. The Webex Service Statuspage now includes an RSS feed for incidents and each individual service. To access the RSS Feed for incidents and services from the Webex Service Status page: Now, once all this is set, here’s how I’ll get notifications on the phone once I have Power Automate setup and authenticated to the correct environment of Power Automate.How do I subscribe to the RSS Feed for Incidents and Services from the Webex Service Status page? How do I subscribe to the RSS Feed for incidents from Cisco Webex Control Hub? How do I subscribe to the RSS feed for cloud impacting incidents and services from Cisco Webex Control Hub?


Getting RSS Feeds on Phone using Power Automate You can have anything here, it’s up to your use case of what you want to do with the Power Automate further on. Paste the URL copied from your RSS source above, and then add a step to send a Notification.Start by building your Power Automate, you can select the Trigger as RSS.Let’s say, for example, this is the website I want to read RSS feeds from.It is my attempt to stay updated on the latest posts so that I don’t miss anything. RSS is powerful and taming it wisely really helps! 🙂 Here’s an example where I used it to get a notification whenever a new blog was posted by Microsoft in their Dynamics 365 Blog page.
