<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><title>azure health</title><id>https://evotec.xyz/es/tags/azure-health/index.atom.xml</id><updated>2019-12-08T16:38:22.0000000Z</updated><subtitle>Evotec Main Website</subtitle><link href="https://evotec.xyz/es/tags/azure-health" /><link href="https://evotec.xyz/es/tags/azure-health/index.atom.xml" rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" /><entry><title>Getting Azure Health by parsing HTML using PSParseHTML</title><id>https://evotec.xyz/es/blog/getting-azure-health-parsing-html-website-using-psparsehtml</id><link href="https://evotec.xyz/es/blog/getting-azure-health-parsing-html-website-using-psparsehtml" /><updated>2019-12-08T16:38:22.0000000Z</updated><summary>Some time ago I’ve wrote PowerShell way to get all information about Office 365 Service Health, and if you were thinking that I would try the same concept for Azure Services you were right. However, I failed. This is because Office 365 Health can be gathered using Microsoft Graph API, and Azure Health information, as far as I know, is not available in the form I wanted it. Azure Status is available as part of Azure Status website. Contrary to Office 365 health you don’t have to login to your Office 365 tenant to read it.</summary><category term="azure" /><category term="azure health" /><category term="powershell" /><category term="psparsehtml" /></entry></feed>