Connecting Fabric data with LLM-based agents
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A new paradigm for guiding intelligent agents
Have you ever wanted to add data entry and write-back functionality to your Power BI Reports? Perhaps you've wanted to add comments to data points, allow users to input new data entries, or perform master data management tasks? Translytical Task Flows in Fabric & Power BI allows you to do all of the above and much more, natively within the platform, without needing licenses for external solutions. In this session we will cover the following essential building blocks for Translytical Task Flows: How to create User Data Functions in Fabric for interacting with your backend. How to trigger your Functions from Power BI. How to provide the best possible User Experience in Power BI, by using slicers and inputs to parameterize your write-back actions. Pros, Cons and Limitations, also in comparison with other write-back solutions (Power Apps, 3rd party solutions). The session will teach you all of the above through the case of a Comment/Annotation write-back solution, which you after this session will easily be able to build for your own Power BI reports.
Power Platform and Fabric both include low-code features. This means that development can be fast and done by the business. We can come up with an idea and create a proof of concept with some working parts and good plan going forward within days, if not hours. We will include multiple features from the Power Platform and Fabric to solve a real business problem. In this session we will take a real business problem, of course connected to flight, and work through a quick design and straight into building the solution. The session will include tips and tricks on how to get started, best practices to follow, which elements are ready to use and which are not quite there yet. You will walk away with ideas and links to resources for you to try out the ideas to build your own business solutions. A fast, fun, demo filled session showing Power Platform and Fabric working together at their best.
Graphs are everywhere – from the intricate web of social networks to the scheduling algorithms on our devices. Yet, Power BI traditionally struggles with visualizing graphs. Discover practical strategies for structuring your data and learn how to use Deneb to create compelling, interactive graph visualizations that reveal crucial relationships within your data.
About Jake: Jake Duddy specializes in Business Intelligence and Power BI. He administers a Power BI tenant, and develops processes and tooling to empower developers. Jake champions best practices, having established DevOps processes and robust admin monitoring solutions
Jake is an active member of the Fabric community. He shares his insights through his blog, https://evaluationcontext.github.io/, where he shares his experiments and experiences with topics related to the Microsoft analytic stack. He is a Community Champion on the Fabric Forums, and he frequently presents at Power BI User Groups, sharing his knowledge with a broader audience