I think this was a solid basic explanation that helps those familiar with Power BI and some of its admin features understand how Fabric expands upon the UI/UX. Thank you! If you were to dive deeper, I wouldn’t mind hearing you simplify the benefits of one lake - especially how it aims to unify data while minimizing the load of copies.
Thank you Wyn! As Fabric became a thing, I began wondering if I should diversify my learnings beyond Power BI. (No, at this time, but I'm happy to understand it better.) An idea for future videos: Maximizing Power BI for Pro Users and Consumers. Premium is not yet on the radar/budget for our organization. How can we make the most of building PBI reports and encourage consumption under Pro Licensing?
No worries. The Centre of Excellence approach is a good start learn.microsoft.com/en-us/power-bi/guidance/fabric-adoption-roadmap-center-of-excellence And matthew roche’s building a data culture series ru-vid.com/group/PLo1cavpz-BB7c8yPJSW8KiNNvyKk2mgoz&si=Zke24aYtt2kHPhWI
Thanks for the explanation 👍🏼, my company is moving all to Fabric, I work as a PBI developer in the insights and data quality team. In your opinion what will be the next tool to focus on learning and using ? Regards
Thank you. I’d look into lakehouse and notebooks and data pipelines to understand optimum ways of importing transform and storing your data. Dataflows gen 2 is also a more familiar way of importing data to a lakehouse.
Yes the Fabric sign in is the Power BI sign in. The Power BI “free” licence is now called Fabric Free. You can set up a free account accessanalytic.com.au/how-to-get-your-free-power-bi-account/