Another confusing aspect is that the June release of Power BI Report Server only allows a live connection to SSAS, but the Get Data Button is still there in Desktop with all the data sources listed. If you happened to get data from a non-SSAS source, you might have made it through the development of the model and report. Only when you tried to save the report to the report server would you find out that you had used incompatible features. This is only a temporary issue and will be resolved in the next release, since it will allow for Power BI models that connect to a wide array of sources.
When we were ready to migrate to production, we wanted to avoid moving content by hand. The RS.Exe utility ignores pbix files (I tried it to see what would happen). But works fine on any SSRS reports you want to move.
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We had to do some research to understand how to set up mobile access for Power BI Report Server. Power BI Report Server uses the same app as the Power BI web service, but it requires a way for users to access the report server within the network. It requires either a VPN on your mobile device or use of Oauth with a web application proxy and ADFS running on Windows Server 2016. This is all fairly standard, but not usually something a BI team would handle, so make sure to involve your networking/security team early on to help plan.
One area that seemed to have some gaps was the lack of subscription and alerting capabilities in Power BI reports. The normal subscription capabilities for Reporting Services reports are present, but there is nothing for Power BI reports. We used this opportunity to discuss how we might not need much push reporting if users have access to reports on their phones and can easily get to the information that way.
The report developers need a Pro License. This is not a technical restriction, its a licensing restriction. You could have 1 or 2 developers developing & publishing content and go for Pro licenses for these devs.
Excellent post and really informative. i found this post while researching for implementing a Power BI solution for the company I work. My organization is also a regulated one and trying to see how i can implement Power BI.I have few questions based on what you wrote.
Thanks for your response Meagan. that definitely helps.
On a different note, is there is a way for me to use the Power BI service to showcase its capabilities to my management. I tried using my company address but some how cant use it. Any ideas on how i cant set up a power bi account
Thanks for the info Meagan. I was able to set up a power bi account separately and get a pro account for 60 days. I will use that for the demo for now. I will contact our IT admin or the O365 admin to know more about it.
Hi, Patrick. Microsoft is definitely pushing cloud first. You get many more features in the cloud with a faster delivery cadence. They have committed to delivering SSRS paginated reports through PowerBI.com, so that is definitely coming. You will also see some changes to workspaces that should make things a little easier. With the addition of SSRS reports, you should be able to use Power BI as a BI portal with Power BI reports and dashboards, Excel, reports, and SSRS reports. An alternative is to create your own portal on a website or in SharePoint. I have seen a few people do this with great success. Also, look for increased admin functionality in PowerBI.com that will make enterprise management easier. For a list of upcoming Power BI features, you can reference
Does anyone have any experience of managing a large scale PBIRS implementaion? (Note: Office365 and cloud Power BI Service is unlilkey to happen at my organisation in the near future, so stuck with evaluating Power Bi on-premise)
Yes, I think your only real recourse is to wait until January. But I think you can feel pretty confident that the next version of PBI Desktop optimized for PBIRS will be able to open the PBIX files. You can also try logging a support ticket to Microsoft and see if they can help you.
Hello! Has any one had experience with automation stress testing for an on prem Power BI server? We have a staging server set up and is looking to service about 250 + users. Ideally we would like to host our SSRS reports and PowerBI reports on the same server. We want to determine the core needed for to build out the production server by stimulated server usage.
AI Workbench, a unified, easy-to-use toolkit for AI developers, will be available in beta later this month. In addition, NVIDIA TensorRT-LLM (TRT-LLM), an open-source library that accelerates and optimizes inference performance of the latest large language models (LLMs), now supports more pre-optimized models for PCs. Accelerated by TRT-LLM, Chat with RTX, an NVIDIA tech demo also releasing this month, allows AI enthusiasts to interact with their notes, documents and other content.
Running generative AI locally on a PC is critical for privacy, latency and cost-sensitive applications. It requires a large installed base of AI-ready systems, as well as the right developer tools to tune and optimize AI models for the PC platform.
To meet these needs, NVIDIA is delivering innovations across its full technology stack, driving new experiences and building on the 500+ AI-enabled PC applications and games already accelerated by NVIDIA RTX technology.
New PC Developer Tools for Building AI Models
To help developers quickly create, test and customize pretrained generative AI models and LLMs using PC-class performance and memory footprint, NVIDIA recently announced NVIDIA AI Workbench.
In collaboration with HP, NVIDIA is also simplifying AI model development by integrating NVIDIA AI Foundation Models and Endpoints, which include RTX-accelerated AI models and software development kits, into the HP AI Studio, a centralized platform for data science. This will allow users to easily search, import and deploy optimized models across PCs and the cloud.
NVIDIA recently extended TensorRT to text-based applications with TensorRT-LLM for Windows, an open-source library for accelerating LLMs. The latest update to TensorRT-LLM, available now, adds Phi-2 to the growing list of pre-optimized models for PC, which run up to 5x faster compared to other inference backends.
RTX-Accelerated Generative AI Powers New PC Experiences
At CES, NVIDIA and its developer partners are releasing new generative AI-powered applications and services for PCs, including:
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