Posts filed under Data Modeling

(Livestream Replay) Best Practices for Report Design & DAX in Power BI - with Gustaw Dudek

ABSTRACT πŸ“

Microsoft Power BI tool consistently provides new features and capabilities to transform the raw data into meaningful insights. Effective UI/UX solutions can be driven by various different functionalities such as, but not limited to: built-in visual-related formatting options (including conditional formatting). In particular contexts, those options can be enhanced ever further by incorporating strategic DAX techniques. By using a combination of the following approaches, including design practices and DAX solutions, it is possible to create reports and dashboards that tell compelling stories from our data in a highly interactive way!

This presentation will demonstrate several practical design & DAX techniques that helps increase report transparency and user experience through the application of certain functionalities, interactions and formatting options.

GUEST BIO πŸ‘€

Gustaw Dudek works as the Head of Business Intelligence at the Polish Company (Enterium). He has multiple years of experience in the field of data analytics and business intelligence. In addition he's one of the resident Enterprise DNA Experts, having created multiple showcase reports for various EDNA contests. Despite of designing most of showcase reports in dark-mode, Gustaw is a huge advocate of IBCS chart standards and really enjoys exploring both the art and science of report design.

RELATED CONTENT πŸ”—

LinkedIn
NovyPro Portfolio

Introducing the Measure Killer (External Tool) for Power BI!

Learn about an up and coming external tool that makes it easy to identify and KILL unused measures and columns from a Power BI dataset (PBIX). Gregor Brunner will walk us through how to use this great tool, how it works, and more. Tune in to find out!

GUEST BIO πŸ‘€

Gregor Brunner is 34 years old, has a background in Economics but moved into Business Intelligence in 2016. Originally from Austria, he moved to Switzerland in 2020 and started Brunner BI, a boutique IT company that specializes in Microsoft Power BI development and consulting.

RELATED CONTENT πŸ”—

Measure Killer (Site)
Measure Killer (Microsoft Store)
Website

Two Ways to Create Single Value Input Slicers in Power BI!

Learn about two techniques for creating a single value input Slicer in Power BI Desktop!

The first method will apply a technique outlined in a SQLBI article (link below) that uses Tabular Editor to allow native columns (fields) to be modified to allow single value slicer types to be used with them. One consideration is that this technique is not officially supported by Microsoft.

The second method shows you an officially supported method for adding a single value input slicer. This alternative way implements a WhatIf parameter and leverages some clever DAX and relationships to achieve the same result.

RELATED CONTENT πŸ”—

SQLBI Single Value Slicer
HTML Content Viewer (Daniel Marsh-Patrick)

Video by: Reid Havens

(Livestream Replay) Configuring Incremental Refresh PBI-Tools - with Mathias Thierbach

ABSTRACT πŸ“

You've heard about Power BI Incremental Refresh for datasets but you're missing powerful tooling? pbi-tools is here to help! Learn how pbi-tools supports you manage, configure, monitor and optimize incremental refresh for your largest datasets. Ask questions and see demos how to automate deploying and refreshing incremental refresh datasets. You'll hear about refresh policies, auto-managed partitions, effective date and many more technical details.

GUEST BIO πŸ‘€

In 2015, after having spent over ten years as a Software Developer and Architect with Microsoft technologies, Mathias Thierbach moved into the Microsoft BI space. He soon landed on Power BI, but also realized quickly that the development and engineering tools and practices were nothing like the ones well established in software development. This is how pbi-tools started as a project, filling this gap in tooling. Today, leading a growing data management team at YouGov, he experiences the benefits of those efforts every day. Having open sourced the project in fall of 2021, Mathias spends a lot of his free time bringing those practices to the wider Power BI community now.

RELATED CONTENT πŸ”—

PBI Tools
Mathias Notes/Articles
Mathias's Twitter
Mathias's LinkedIn
Mathias's GitHub