Welcome to the Power BI Monthly Digest for October! There are several enhancements and improvements to introduce this month as well as some cool new things with a few in preview. As always, check out our video for demos of what’s new for October. No tricks here, only treats in this Halloween month!
1. Direct Query – If you’re not familiar, Direct Query allows you the option to connect directly to the underlying data source rather than importing your data into Power BI. This month there’s been an enhancement to the way your visuals interact with your Direct Query sources in the Power BI Desktop and being pushed into the Power BI Service.
This allows for a separation of behavior for how report creators experience this versus how users will experience this on the service side. This is in preview, so be sure to go to Options/Settings to use this new feature. Let’s look:
2. New Q&A and PowerApps Visuals in the Pane – Q&A is surely not a new feature but one you’ll want to take advantage of if you’re not already. On the developer side if you know how to do that ‘Google Kung Fu’ and analyze your data with some native query language, you can create anything you need – great stuff!
We’ve always had the capability to double click, get a little box and ask questions. That still exists but now we get presented with a new visual display. There is quite a list of features and enhancements that comes along with this new visualization. Some may have been a bit fearful or overwhelmed by Q&A as they felt as if they needed to come up with something else on their visual – how about some guidance? You’ll get that with this new version.
3. Query Analyzer – A recent addition, the Query Analyzer gives us the capability to discover performance barriers or any kind of performance related elements (DAX related elements such as ad queries for instance) inside the data model.
The new enhancement has to do with the shaping side. In the Power Query Editor, we now have the Diagnostics Monitor which we can use to find diagnostics. This is a preview feature so be sure to turn in on in Options/Settings. When you go into the Power Query Editor, you’ll see a new option to toggle this on and start this monitoring service. Then you can bring in tables, conditional columns and any kind of M transformational elements, and when you’re ready, stop diagnostics and it will create a couple tables for us where we can analyze and see what’s going on there.
So, on the visual side we have the Performance Analyzer which shows us the performance of our visuals and our model. Now on the data shaping side within the Query Editor we can look at the performance of bringing data in and into our model.
Again, this is in preview and looking ahead, I see a lot on enhancements coming to this over time. Let’s take a quick look:
This gives you complete control to keep an eye on performance issues, incredibly useful.
4. New Connectors – Power BI has had some new connectors added and others updated this month. For instance, they’ve made some updates to the Azure Cost Management Connector which is great as it allows you to see where your expenses are coming from within Azure.
5. New Power BI File Type – For those that have worked a lot with Excel or perhaps have connections to cubes or data sources and you open up an ODS (Office Data Connection) file, that same kind of concept you have with ODS files in Office or Excel. You now have that concept inside of Power BI.
In Excel you could double click on that file and it would open an empty pivot table ready for you to build a report off the data source. Along the same concept, you can open a Power BI file that an administrator creates for you and it points to the data source. Then as a user that wants to create reports, you can double click on that file and it opens a connection that is already pointed to the right data source.
Rather than using a template, this gives you a more refined way from a development perspective where you know the specific data sources you’ll need to connect to. A great thing in our PBI toolset to streamline the development process. Check out our demo on this one to see this in action.
So, some interesting new things this month as well as adding some polish to others like the Q&A visual. Another thing we didn’t demo but mentioned earlier was the PowerApps visual. This allows you to embed a PowerApp inside of your report. The benefit here is you can now have an app inside your report that writes back to the data source that’s being used inside of Power BI, so you can make changes in that app and immediately see the results in your report. Great versatility with this.
Please comment below and let us know what’s your favorite new thing that came out this month. And if you need more Power BI training, we’ve done some huge updates to our Power BI classes so everything that’s been released recently has been added to our classes as we want to ensure you have the most up to date training.
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