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Power BI March 2025 Feature Summary

Headshot of article author Patrick LeBlanc

Welcome to the March 2025 update for Power BI!

This month, we’re thrilled to share with you a host of new features and improvements designed to enhance your data analysis and visualization experience. We’ve made significant strides in performance and usability, ensuring that Power BI continues to be a powerful tool for your data needs.

Some of the highlights include Desktop start-up performance improvements, Copilot generated DAX queries using user-created hierarchies, create semantic models in Direct Lake storage mode, and improved language understanding for data questions and ad hoc calculation support for data questions.

FabCon started off with a bang! Dive in to explore these exciting features and see how they can help you make the most of your data and be sure to check the Fabric Feature summary to find out what’s happening in the rest of the data landscape.

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After reviewing 500 entries over 4 weeks, judges have selected 4 incredible competitors who will be joining us on stage in Las Vegas for the Grand Finale! They will be building their visualization LIVE in front of hundreds of DataViz enthusiasts as they vie for the title of WORLD CHAMPION!

Congratulations to Santhanalakshmi, Injae, Jon, and Javier, our four finalists! Check out their data visualizations and over 40 other judges favorites!

 

 

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Version number: v: 2.141.1228.0

Date published: 3/30/25

 

 

 

Contents

 

 

 

General

Desktop start-up performance improvements

We heard your feedback! We’re thrilled to announce that our team has been working to improve Power BI Desktop’s start-up performance. Starting with the March release, you’ll begin to see these improvements gradually rolled out.

 

Figure 1: The GIF demonstrates a comparison between opening a blank report with the new improvements vs. the old version.

Figure 2: The GIF demonstrates the comparison between opening a PBIX report with the new improvements vs. the old version.

Upgrade Power BI Desktop

Upgrade to the 64-bit version Power BI Desktop to keep receiving updates and support. The 32-bit version will no longer be supported after 6/31/2025.

To continue using the Report view Copilot chat pane, upgrade to the February 2025 version. It may not work as expected for versions before February 2025 after April 30, 2025.

Copilot and AI

Get a Copilot summary directly from your Teams message with a single click

The Power BI preview message in Teams chat and Outlook has been extended to include a Copilot summary with the click of a button. The new button, labeled ‘Open Copilot summary in Power BI’ opens the item alongside the Copilot summary.

This feature enables users to understand the content of a Power BI item more easily.

The button will be displayed for items that support Copilot and for users who have Copilot enabled.

This feature is available on all Teams and Outlook platforms, including desktop, browser, and mobile.

Copilot in Power BI to write DAX queries in DAX query view updates

Copilot in Power BI can now write DAX queries using user-created hierarchies and display folder names from the semantic model. Including these in your model gives Copilot additional context about how to use your data and leverages existing data structures to accelerate and improve DAX queries.

For instance, you can reference measures grouped in a specific folder to be shown by a hierarchy, and Copilot will generate a DAX query with those measures by that hierarchy with a simple user request. Using hierarchies and display folders streamlines the process of writing complex DAX queries. Especially in models with many measures or columns, display folders can help organize and logically group them.

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Columns and measures can be added to display folders using the Properties pane in the Model view. Patrick LeBlanc has a 2-minute video on how you can create hierarchies with EASILY create a Hierarchy in Power BI Desktop.

This is in addition to the recent updates allowing Copilot to understand your data better by using descriptions and synonyms on columns, tables, and measures. And including sample values from columns. Read more about how this improves Copilot at Microsoft Fabric Copilot to write DAX queries in Power BI update.

Improved language understanding for data questions

We’ve been hard at work improving the Copilot capability for answering data questions from your model. This month we’ve enhanced the language understanding layer by further leveraging an LLM to interpret and understand common synonyms, phrasings, and individual values in your model mentioned in your questions. In summary, Copilot can now understand more of your questions out-of-the-box!

Previously, certain questions required the report author to curate terms to ensure Copilot could correctly understand and answer accurately. Now, with the full power of an LLM, Copilot can understand significantly more questions out-of-the-box, saving the report author curation time and saving the Copilot user time clarifying common terms.

Before After
Previously, Copilot struggled to understand that tea is a synonym for chai in the data without the report author adding this mapping to Q&A setup.

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Now, Copilot understands this out-of-box because chai is a commonly known synonym for tea.

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Previously, Copilot struggled to understand what ‘export’ could mean in relation to products and suppliers.

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Now, Copilot understands this by default and saves the user a click to confirm this common relationship.

 

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Previously, Copilot needed clarification for which instance value Ana refers to, even though there’s only 1 match in the data.

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Now, Copilot correctly understands and saves the user a click because there is only 1 Ana in the data, no need to clarify first to produce the answer.

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To learn more about the improved language understanding and additional tips for using the data question capability in Copilot, check out Ask Copilot for data from your model (preview).

Ad hoc calculation support for data questions

Another major enhancement we’ve added to the Copilot capability for answering data questions from your model is ad hoc calculation support. Previously, if your question required creating new measures on the fly, not contained in the model, like a calculated column for profit or deriving the average, Copilot would not be able to respond.

This month we’ve brought over the same DAX query generation capability you know and love from DAX query view to the Copilot pane. Now, Copilot pane can generate DAX queries to answer questions that require ad hoc calculations.

Questions such as:

  • What was the year-over-year growth for sales?
  • How many employees were hired before 2020?
  • Calculate the ratio of cosmetic product orders to all products.
  • Which customers did not buy any products?

You can also verify the DAX query directly from the expanded view or launch DAX query view for further inspection.

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Note: This is currently only available from Edit Mode of reports using Copilot. This is not yet available while using Copilot in read mode.

 

 

 

Reporting

Better storytelling with Data annotations in Power BI for PowerPoint (Preview)

The Power BI add-in for PowerPoint significantly enhances presentations with real-time business insights, facilitating data-driven conversations and meetings.

We are pleased to announce a public preview of the new enhancement that allows users to make their presentations even more engaging by adding data point annotations to the visuals incorporated into their slides.

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Annotations enable users to add descriptive text directly to visualizations, offering contextual explanations or highlights that improve communication and understanding. This feature transforms data storytelling by allowing users to communicate insights with greater efficacy and enhance the engagement and informativeness of presentations.

To utilize annotations, you first need to embed a single visual within the add-in in a slide. Then, simply select a data point on the visual, right-click, and choose ‘Annotate.’ You can then begin typing your text. You can reference the data point’s measure value and category values in the annotation, ensuring the content is connected to the actual data point. Typing ‘/’provides options that can be included in the annotation text.

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Annotations will display whenever the data point is visible. If the visual is filtered, resulting in the disappearance of the data point, the annotation will likewise disappear. Additionally, if the data updates and the data point is no longer part of the visual, the annotation will not be shown as well.

Annotations are specific to the presentation and slide where the visual was added, allowing users to provide content that is truly in the context of their presentation.

Notes:

  1. Annotations are not supported in custom visuals.
  2. Annotations are supported in all Power BI native Cartesians visuals.
  3. Annotations are available only when embedding a single visual view, and not a page view.

Learn more about data annotations.

Copy report object name

The Power BI enhanced report format (PBIR) saves the entire report definition as a folder, with each visual, page, and bookmark getting saved into its own individual file. However, identifying the folder or file in the file system can be challenging, especially for visuals.

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You now have the option to activate a global report setting in Power BI Desktop, enabling the ability to copy any report object name—including pages, visuals, bookmarks, and filters—to the clipboard.

Go to File > Options and settings > Report settings > Report objects and check the box next to ‘Copy object names when right clicking on report objects’.

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Once the setting is enabled, right-clicking on any report object will present the option ‘Copy object name’, which copies the object name to the clipboard.

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You can subsequently enter the name into the search bar of Windows Explorer or Visual Studio Code to efficiently locate or identify the object name within the PBIR folder:

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Copy report object name in the Service

It is also possible to copy report object name within the service during report editing. To do so, you must first enable the report user setting: open any report settings and enable the ‘Copy object names when right clicking on report objects’ option. (while it’s configured per report it’s a user setting, you don’t need to enable it for each report).

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When editing a report, you now have the capability to right-click on any report object and copy its name:

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This functionality is beneficial not only for identifying file names in PBIR file format, but also for performance troubleshooting through Workspace Monitoring or Log Analytics to link the DAX query to a visual in the report.

For example, you can easily find the DAX query of a visual by searching for its visual name:

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Referenced column highlights for visual calculations (Preview)

Struggling with DAX calculations? Visual calculation is here to help to make adding calculations easier and faster! Visual calculations now include referenced column highlights to indicate the columns referred to in your visual calculation. These highlights, akin to those in Excel, will show up in the visual matrix as soon as a column is referenced, and the reference in the visual calculation formula will be marked with the corresponding color. For example, let’s create a visual calculation that calculates the running sum of Sales Amount and resets for every year:

Running Sum = RUNNINGSUM([Sales Amount], [Fiscal Year])

When editing this visual calculation, the related column headers are highlighted:

A screenshot of a visual matrix showing Sales Amount and Running Sum by Fiscal Year, Fiscal Quarter and Channel. The Running Sum visual calculations is in edit mode and the Fiscal Year and Sales Amount columns it refers to are highlighted.

Additionally, the referenced column highlights can be turned off and on using the matrix highlights toggle that is on the right of the formula bar in visual calculations edit mode:

The toggle button to show or hide matrix highlights. It is located on the right of the formula bar in visual calculations edit mode.

This is only the beginning of making visual calculations even easier to use, so stay tuned for more! Learn more about visual calculations.

Enhancements to Reference Lines

We are introducing new updates to improve feature parity for reference lines.

  1. You can add shade areas for all reference line types.

A close-up of a graph AI-generated content may be incorrect.2. When the reference line position is set to ‘behind’, the shade area will also be moved behind the chart.

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3. For Line and stacked column and Line and clustered column charts, we now support reference lines on the Y-axis. Dynamic reference lines (Min, Max, Average, etc.) are only available for Line and clustered column charts.

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Mostly more formatting control, including Tile Layout for the multiples (M0 was Tabular Layout only)

Category enhancements for new card (Preview)

The new card visual is steadily progressing towards becoming the official card, which will replace both the current card and multi-row card. This month, we’re introducing additional enhancements for categories, previously known as small multiples.

  1. We’re introducing two new styles for categories: table style and cards style. The new cards style will split each category into a separate card, providing a more organized and visually appealing layout. Each style option comes with its own settings, which you can find under small multiples layout > Layout > Styles.

Screens screenshot of a tablet AI-generated content may be incorrect.2 Small multiple headers for the new card visual can be placed on the left, top, right, or bottom.

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3 The titles of the small multiple headers can be oriented to the left, top, right, or bottom.

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You can now apply conditional formatting to elements of your new card based on the logic of each category.

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Remember, the new card visual is still in preview, to enable this new visual, follow these steps:

  1. Go to File > Options and settings > Options.
  2. Navigate to Preview features.
  3. Check the option for new card visual.

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Introducing style presets to visuals

Style presets are predefined formatting options that can be applied to visual elements using a custom theme file.

Users can now create personalized style presets. This new feature allows users to change multiple formatting options simultaneously while eliminating the need to manually change each formatting option individually.

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By creating and importing a custom JSON theme file that includes your desired style presets, you’ll unlock a new Style presets menu option within the Format Visual section of the Visualizations pane. Utilizing the Style dropdown, you can easily select any of your predefined style presets from the newly imported theme file to automatically apply formatting options to visual elements in their report, such as positioning elements or altering colors.

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When crafting a custom theme file, users can specify which style preset will be the default after importing, as shown here. If no preset is selected or defined, Power BI’s default settings will be applied, ensuring there are always fallback formatting options for visual elements.

In the following example, Demo Preset 1 sets the legend position to the bottom center and changes the gridline color of the value axis.

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In this next example, Demo Preset 2 moves the legend to the right side and changes the gridline color and the label color of the value axis.

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An error condition will occur, as shown below, when the theme is changed, causing the report to lose the reference to the preset definitions. This results in an author-only error message indicating that the preset cannot be found.

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This new style presets feature is available with this March 2025 update, so have a look and share your feedback.

For more information about custom theme files, JSON, and more, have a look at the MS Learn article entitled Using report themes in Power BI Desktop.

The Core Visuals team is dedicated to enhancing our features and functionality continuously. We’re committed to advancing our capabilities and we highly value all feedback. Please share your insights regarding this enhancement in the comment section.

Insights category for business users in the OneLake catalog

The OneLake catalog is a centralized platform that allows users to discover, explore, and manage their data assets across the organization. It simplifies data governance and enhances accessibility, ensuring that business users, analysts, and data professionals can quickly locate and utilize the resources they need. Learn more about the OneLake catalog.

Business users now have a dedicated Insights category, bringing together a comprehensive view of their key analytics assets. This category includes Reports, Dashboards, Organizational Apps, Fabric Insights such as Real-time Dashboards and AI Skills, and more. With this new category, users can effortlessly discover actionable insights tailored to their data, improving decision-making and overall analytics engagement.
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Modeling

Create semantic models in Direct Lake storage mode from one or more Fabric artifacts in Power BI Desktop

We are excited to announce the public preview of creating semantic models using Direct Lake storage mode in Power BI Desktop! Direct Lake unlocks massive data with blazing fast query performance – without having to manage data refreshes and without causing data duplication. For the first time with Direct Lake semantic models, you can add tables from multiple OneLake data sources, giving you the flexibility to combine data for your needs to create stunning Power BI reports.

Create these Direct Lake semantic models in just a few clicks in Power BI Desktop.

With the preview feature turned on, select a Lakehouse or Warehouse from the OneLake catalog then Connect.

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Direct Lake semantic models read the OneLake data directly and are created in the workspace. Give the semantic model a name, pick a workspace, and select the tables you want to include then OK.

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The semantic model is created in the workspace and now you are live editing the semantic model in Desktop, easy as that!

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To bring in other tables, return to the OneLake catalog and pick another Lakehouse or Warehouse. Like when you created the semantic model, just pick a Lakehouse or Warehouse and click Connect. And it’s added to the semantic model.

From you can continue data modeling: add relationships, measures, calculation groups, hierarchies. DAX query view is available to view data in the tables and try out calculations.

For more information and any limitations about Direct Lake on OneLake during public preview see the Direct Lake overview documentation.

TMDL view support for Direct Lake semantic models (Preview)

You can now use TMDL view to edit your semantic model in Direct Lake mode. TMDL view not only can provide a code-first semantic modeling experience but also enable unique scenarios, such as altering the Lakehouse connected to the semantic model.

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Please note that if you rename or remove an object using TMDL view, it is essential to include Power BI metadata annotations changed Property and PBI_RemovedChildren to ensure your customizations are retained the next time you synchronize your Direct Lake semantic model with the Lakehouse.

For further information on tracking customizations, please refer to the Direct Lake in Power BI Desktop (Preview) documentation.

Updates to Semantic model version history (Preview)

We are excited to announce that coming soon, the preview of semantic model version history will include support for Pro workspaces. This feature aims to empower self-service users by providing confidence to recover from critical mistakes when editing semantic models on the web. In this preview, versions will be automatically captured in an Office-like history pane for your web-edited semantic models. You can easily select and restore any of these previous versions of your semantic model.

Screenshot showing the version history pane.

Additionally, you have the option to manually save versions to the version history for your semantic model.

Screenshot showing how to manually save version history from the File menu.

We highly value your feedback, so please share your thoughts using the feedback forum. For more details on this feature, including limitations, please refer to the Use semantic model version history (Preview) documentation.

Edit your data model in the Power BI Service – updates (Preview)

The following improvements to the data model editing in the Service preview will be coming soon:

On by default preview for Pro workspaces

With the release of semantic model version history for pro workspaces, we will start enabling the workspace-level preview feature for editing data models in the service. The Users can edit data models workspace setting will be turned on by default for Pro workspaces. If you prefer, you can still disable the workspace preview for your workspace, but we recommend keeping it enabled! Power BI administrators will still have the ability to enable or disable data model editing in the service for the entire organization or specific security groups through the admin portal.

For more details on the subject, reference the Edit data models in the Power BI service (preview) documentation.

Please continue to submit your feedback directly in the comments of this blog post or in the feedback forum.

Live edit of semantic models in Direct Lake mode with Power BI Desktop – updates (Preview)

Edit in Desktop button

Coming this month, you can now seamlessly open your Direct Lake semantic models for editing in Power BI Desktop directly from the web. Just like in Office products, simply select the Edit in Desktop (preview) option from the web to launch Power BI Desktop with the same Direct Lake model open and ready for editing.

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More details on the feature, including requirements, considerations, and limitations can be found in the Direct Lake in Power BI Desktop (preview) documentation.

We highly value your feedback on this feature and encourage you to share it through our feedback form or the Power BI Community.

Use notebooks with your semantic model (Preview)

We are excited to introduce one-click experiences that make it easier than ever to start using Fabric notebooks and semantic link to analyze your semantic models on the web! Simply choose one of our pre-configured notebooks, and we’ll handle the creation and configuration, allowing you to seamlessly run analysis against your semantic model.

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We are offering the following out-of-the-box experiences for your semantic models:

Best Practices Analyzer – When you run this notebook, the Best Practice Analyzer (BPA) will offer tips to improve the design and performance of your semantic model. By default, the BPA checks a set of 60+ rules against your semantic model and summarizes the results. These rules come from experts within Microsoft and the Fabric Community. You’ll get suggestions for improvement in five categories: Performance, DAX Expressions, Error Prevention, Maintenance, and Formatting.

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Memory Analyzer – When you run this notebook, the Memory Analyzer will show you memory/storage statistics about the objects in your semantic model (i.e. Tables, Columns, Hierarchies, Partitions, and Relationships). These statistics may be used to identify areas of performance optimization and memory reduction for your semantic model.

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Additionally, we are very excited to announce the Power BI Community notebooks gallery! Here you can explore and submit notebooks you’ve created to enhance your Power BI data analysis and reporting with the rest of the Power BI community.

For more details on this feature, including limitations, please refer to the What is semantic link? documentation.

We highly value your feedback, so please share your thoughts using the feedback forum.

Access the Azure Analysis Services migration tool from your workspace

You can now access the AAS migration tool from your Fabric workspace by clicking the ‘Migrate’ button and selecting the ‘Data model’ card. The AAS migration is an easy-to-use migration solution that enables the migration of models from AAS servers to workspaces in Fabric. It allows customers to migrate their models at a click of a button, as well as utilize server redirection capabilities to automatically redirect client-tool connections from an existing AAS server to a model residing in Fabric. This creates a seamless migration experience that minimizes impact to downstream users, reports, and automation processes, allowing customers to leverage the full capability suite of Power BI and Fabric.

More details on how to get started

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Table View improvements!

We’ve made new improvements to the Table View in Power BI Desktop! Now, simply right-click on any cell to access a variety of options—including copying the entire table, a specific column, just the cell’s value or using keyword shortcut of Ctrl+C for the values. With this update, you can extract individual cell values directly, eliminating any need for extra steps and making your workflow more efficient.

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Distribution, discovery, and consumption

CI/CD for Org Apps (Preview)

Support for Fabric Git integration and deployment pipelines for org apps is now in preview!

  • With Git, you can develop and version org apps with ease. Org app developers can manage, and version org apps based on their development processes.
  • With deployment pipelines, you can test and deploy org apps with confidence. Org app authors and developers can develop, test, and review in staged workspaces before deploying to final production workspaces, with user access uniquely managed per org app item in each staged workspace.

Git Integration for Org Apps (Continuous Integration)

Git integration Microsoft Fabric empowers org app developers to seamlessly integrate their development processes, tools, and best practices directly into the Microsoft Fabric workspace. Setting up Git is as easy as a couple of clicks. Configure the Git repository and branch details in the workspace settings to set up a connection. Once set up, commit org app changes with confidence, knowing you can version or branch as you iterate on org app items and included items in your workspace.

Image illustrating Git integration benefits: work with versions, keep a history, code together, automate tasks

Git enables org app developers to:

  • Backup and version of their org app item, along with included items.
  • See version history and revert to previous versions of org apps and included content as needed.
  • Collaborate on org apps with others or iterate on your own using Git branches.
  • Automate or script tasks around your processes.

Deployment Pipelines for Org Apps (Continuous Deployment)

Items included in an org app (preview), like reports, use the source item in the workspace for display in the org app, unlike workspace apps that display versioned copies of included items after workspace app update. To date, workspace apps have allowed report authors to iterate on reports across just two stages without impacting the published copy of the report in a workspace app.

Now, with deployment pipelines support for org app items, you can create, manage, and deploy in stages that match your workflow. Compared to workspace apps that support just two stages, org apps support for deployment pipelines gives you the flexibility to add several stages based on your needs.

For example, after changes have been finalized, Fabric deployment pipelines enable org app authors or developers to automate or manually control the deployment of changes across different workspaces used for 1. development, 2. testing, 3. review, and 4. production stages.

Screenshot of new deployment pipelines interface illustrating four stages of org app and included content deployment: org app development, org app testing, org app review, and production org app stages...each stage having its own assigned workspace that content is deployed to.

Deployment pipelines enable org app authors and developers to:

  • Ensure that org apps are in sync with earlier stages.
  • Verify and deploy changes quickly and reliably.
  • Use ‘Select related’ to ensure items included in the org app are also promoted during deployment.
  • Reduce the risk of errors and conflicts that might arise from manual interventions or inconsistent configurations.
  • Compare org apps across different environments.
  • Ultimately, ensure the delivery of quality org app experiences to your org app consumers.

Deployment pipelines empower teams to produce updates in short cycles with high speed, frequency, and consistency. Changes can be promoted at any time with a single click.

With these updates, you’re seeing the future of workspace apps being prepared within org apps (preview) by building on the power of the Fabric platform. As we work towards org apps general availability, we look forward to hearing your feedback and continuing to build out org apps to meet your consumer distribution and consumption needs.

For more information, see Microsoft Learn documentation related to CI/CD and org apps:

Introducing new customization options for Org Apps – Combined Navigation (Preview)

We’re continuing to enhance your ability to customize org apps with the release of the combined navigation setting. This new functionality allows org app authors to have more control over their consumer experience by offering several navigation configurations.

Previously, org apps had separate navigation panes; one for the org app itself and another for the report in view. With the combined navigation experience, you can now choose to show a single pane with report pages within the app navigation pane, eliminating the need for two separate navigation panes. This means that the pages of reports will be shown underneath the reports listed in the org app navigation pane, providing a more streamlined and cohesive user experience.

Screenshot showing that the combined navigation setting for org apps is now available. Screenshot shows both the settings for org app navigation and the resulting view of an org app with pages shown underneath reports in the org app nav.

Covered in the original org apps (preview) announcement, org apps offer a level of customization beyond workspace apps. And by adding this new combined navigation option you can customize an org app even more. Starting with whether you prefer to have the org app navigation collapsed or expanded by default. Or even turn off the org app navigation completely. And for those who prefer to show org app navigation, the combined navigation experience offers additional flexibility and control. Or, when a report is in view, you can choose to show a separate navigation of pages in the report. Explore these configurations and other combinations for your org apps. This level of customization ensures that you can create a unique and tailored experience for different groups within your organization.

This new option of combining the org app navigation and report navigation is like the previous version of org apps offered, known as workspace apps. Workspace apps allowed for a unified navigation experience, and the combined navigation experience in org apps builds on that foundation by providing even more customization options. By combining the navigation panes, org app consumers can enjoy a seamless and efficient way to access and interact with data in your org apps that may be familiar to them from workspace apps.

For more information on how you can customize your org apps, from custom branding to navigation settings, see Microsoft Learn documentation for org apps (preview):

Get started with org apps (preview).

Data connectivity

Improvement in Snowflake connector (Preview)

We sincerely appreciate your trial and feedback on the new Snowflake connector under preview. This month, we continue enhancing this connector to further boost its performance to provide better experience. You can upgrade to the latest version to evaluate these enhancements. Learn more about the Snowflake connector and what’s new from the New Snowflake connector implementation (Preview) documentation.

Mobile

View reports linked to a semantic model directly from Power BI Mobile

Previously, we added support to view semantic models from the Power BI Mobile apps, so users will be able to track the model status and trigger on-demand refresh when needed.

Now, we are adding to the semantic model the ability to see which reports are connected to it as well.

Understanding which reports were created from a semantic model in Power BI is crucial for several reasons. It ensures the consistency and reliability of the data being used across different reports. When users know that the reports are linked to a common semantic model, they can trust that the metrics and calculations are standardized. This is particularly important in collaborative environments where multiple stakeholders rely on accurate data to make informed decisions.

To see the connected reports, open any semantic model in the app, and select ‘Linked content’ from the info pane. You can now view related reports you have access to, including those from different workspaces. The origin workspace of each report is shown below its name.

Learn more about working with semantic models in Power BI Mobile: Work with semantic models in the Power BI apps for mobile devices

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Visualizations

Drill Down Combo PRO by ZoomCharts

Combo PRO is your multi-tool for visualizing categorical data. Combine up to 25 series on the same chart, choose between three chart types for each series, and create stacks and clusters to build the perfect visual for your report – even chart types like clustered column charts, histograms, lipstick charts and many others.

Furthermore, you can create a category hierarchy with multiple columns, which will allow the user to drill down with just a click or tap directly on the chart. Combo PRO provides intuitive user experience with full touch support, and it seamlessly cross-filters with other visuals to provide instant insights that enable swift and fully informed decisions.

Main features:

  • Combine up to 25 series of columns, lines, and areas
  • One-click drill down
  • Intuitive on-chart interactions
  • Split by ‘legend’
  • Show additional insights with the ‘tooltip content’ field
  • Rich customization (axes, series, legends, labels, tooltips, and more)
  • Up to four threshold lines or areas
  • Conditional formatting

Get Drill Down Combo PRO on AppSource

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Sunburst Chart by Powerviz

Powerviz’s Sunburst Chart is an interactive tool for hierarchical data visualization. This chart visualizes multiple hierarchy columns, revealing part-to-whole relationships with a concentric circle design.

Key features:

  • Arc customization: Customize arc shape, patterns, and formatting for unique designs.
  • Color scheme: 30+ color palettes, including color-blind safe mode.
  • Centre circle: Design an inner circle with layers. Add text, measure, icons, and images.
  • Ranking: Filter Top/Bottom N values, with “Others”.
  • Conditional formatting: Easily identify outliers based on measure or category rules.
  • Labels: Smart, readable data labels inside or outside shapes.
  • Image labels: Add an image as an outer label.
  • Interactivity: Zoom, drill down, cross-filtering, and tooltip features.
  • Sequences: Clearly view which level is being explored.
  • Control tooltip visibility: Add and apply tooltips globally or by level.

Other features included are annotation, grid view, show condition, and accessibility support.

Business use cases:

  • Sales and marketing: Market share analysis and customer segmentation.
  • Finance: Department budgets and expenditures distribution.
  • Operations: Supply chain management.
  • Education: Course structure, curriculum creation.
  • Try Sunburst Chart for FREE from AppSource
  • Check out all features of the visual: Demo file
  • Step-by-step instructions: Documentation
  • YouTube video: Video Link
  • Learn more about visuals: https://powerviz.ai/

Follow Powerviz: https://lnkd.in/gN_9Sa6U
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Attribute Control Chart by Nova Silva

Earlier this year, Nova Silva introduced the Attribute Control Chart for Power BI, designed to empower users with advanced quality control insights. Initially, it supported the foundational attribute chart types, including the c chart, u chart, Laney u chart, p chart, Laney p chart, and np chart.

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Now, we’re excited to announce expanded capabilities with support for Rare Event Control Charts — specifically, the T chart and G chart. These charts are essential for monitoring events that occur infrequently, allowing for more nuanced control in scenarios where traditional control charts may not be sensitive enough. The T chart helps monitor the time between rare events, while the G chart tracks the count of opportunities between events. These new additions make the Attribute Control Chart even more versatile, enabling organizations to gain insights into low-frequency incidents, which are often critical yet challenging to monitor.

By expanding Power BI’s Attribute Control Chart functionality, we continue to support diverse business needs, helping teams identify issues promptly and maintain high-quality standards across all processes.

Ready to experience the Attribute Control Chart? Download it from AppSource today and explore its capabilities with your own data – try for free!

Closing

That’s all for this month!

We hope that you enjoy the update! If you installed Power BI Desktop from the Microsoft Store, please leave us a review.

As always, keep voting on Ideas to help us determine what to build next. We are looking forward to hearing from you!

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