Updated: October 23, 2024 (October 3, 2024)

  Charts & Illustrations

Power BI Back-end Platforms—Oct. 2024

My Atlas / Charts & Illustrations

624 wordsTime to read: 4 min
Andrew Snodgrass by
Andrew Snodgrass

Andrew analyzes and writes about Microsoft's data management, business intelligence, and machine learning solutions, as well as aspects of licensing... more

Microsoft offers customers several Power BI back-end platform options (shown here), including multiple cloud services and an on-premises product, called Power BI Report Server. They vary by support for content types, client tools, features, performance, scaling, security, and licensing. 

Back-end Functions as a Repository and Server

The back-end platforms act as repositories for the following components:

  • Reports
  • Semantic data models
  • Data integration pipelines.

They are also the workhorse for numerous activities:

  • Authenticating users, applications, and data connections
  • Executing queries and controlling data refresh schedules
  • Pulling data from various sources via connectors and gateways
  • Processing data integration pipelines
  • Rendering reports
  • Publishing and distributing reports and dashboards
  • Responding to real-time user interaction
  • Interfacing with applications.

The Different Back-end Platforms 

Back-end platforms include the following:

Power BI Free is designed for individual users and occasional report consumers. It lacks security controls, provides limited data storage capacity and refresh rates, and has other significant shortcomings that typically make it unsuitable for most organizations. 

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