Exploring, visualizing and presenting data with power view

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At Code Mastery Boston Stevo Smocilac of Magenic highlights: New feature of SQL Server 2012 Reporting Services, Interactive data exploration, visualization, and presentation experience, Point and click interface, End user orientated, Supplements current Microsoft tools, Fills gap in the current Microsoft BI reporting toolset, Tightly integrated with PowerPivot & BISM

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  • 1.Exploring, Visualizing andPresenting Data with Power ViewPresented By:Stevo [email protected] 2, 2012

2. What is Power View New feature of SQL Server 2012 Reporting Services Interactive data exploration, visualization, and presentation experience Point and click interface End user orientated Supplements current Microsoft tools Fills gap in the current Microsoft BI reporting toolset Tightly integrated with PowerPivot & BISM 3. Features of Power View Presentation-ready Based on data models Visual design experience Creating data visualizations Filtering and highlighting data Sorting Reports with multiple views Performancehttp://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh213579.aspx 4. Microsoft Reporting Tool ComparisonSSRS Power View Excel/Power PerformancePivot PointTraditional, high fidelity reportsYesNo Partial NoAlerting & subscription functionality YesNo NoNoInteractive data explorationNo YesPartial PartialEnd user developmentNo YesPartial NoDashboard creationNo No Partial YesNative mobile support No No Partial PartialCustomizability YesNo Partial NoNumber of data sources supportedMany TwoManyFew 5. SophisticatedProductive Visual dataDesign Environment Authoring representation Report Re-useHighly Viewer Controls of insightsInteractiveRich Design FlexibleRichCapabilities layout Presentation Report Designer Report Builder Power ViewEmbedded Operational Business 2011 Microsoft Corporation. 6. System Requirements SQL Server 2012 Enterprise Business Intelligence Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 Enterprise Edition (SP1 Recommended) Client browsers Internet Explorer 7/8/9 Firefox 7 Safari 5 Silverlight 5 7. Supported Operating Systems & Browsers Macintosh OSWindowsWindows BrowserWindows 7Windows Vista 10.6 10.7Server 2008 R2 Server 2008 (Intel-based) Internet32-bit, 64-bit 32-bit, 64-bit 32-bit, 64-bit 32-bit, 64-bitNot supported Explorer 9 Internet32-bit, 64-bit 32-bit, 64-bit 32-bit, 64-bit 32-bit, 64-bitNot supported Explorer 8 InternetNot supported32-bit, 64-bit Not supported32-bit, 64-bitNot supported Explorer 7 Firefox 732-bit 32-bit Not supported32-bitNot supported Safari 5 Not supportedNot supportedNot supportedNot supported 32-bit, 64-bithttp://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms156511.aspx#bkmk_powerview 8. ArchitectureSharePoint 2010SQL Server Web BrowserReporting ServicesSilverlight 5 Power ViewPowerPoint SSAS TabularSilverlight 5Database PowerPivot 9. Data Source Preparation Getting your data source ready to create Power View reports 10. Building a BISM Tabular Model Database 11. Deploying a BISM Tabular Model Database 12. BI Semantic Model (BISM) Connections Portable connection file Created and accessed via SharePoint Supported databases Tabular model database PowerPivot workbooks Security/Authentication Kerberos on the first attempt If Kerberos fails will use effectiveusername parameterhttp://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/gg471575.aspx 13. DemoExploring Power View 14. Summary Great tool for business users & analysts Fills gap in Microsoft BI reporting toolset Extremely polished version 1.0 product Needs SharePoint Enterprise Edition Currently requires Tabular SSAS database or PowerPivot workbook Currently no mobile support 15. ResourcesSQL Server 2012http://www.microsoft.com/sqlserver/en/us/future-editions.aspxMSDN Libraryhttp://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh213579.aspxAnalysis Services and PowerPivot Team Bloghttp://blogs.msdn.com/b/analysisservices/SQL Server Reporting Services Team Bloghttp://blogs.msdn.com/b/sqlrsteamblog/ 16. Questions