Microsoft has added features to Power BI for Office 365, a data analysis tool to complement Excel that the company hasn’t yet released in final form.
The preview of Power BI for Office 365 now offers users the ability to mine data using natural language, question-and-answer-type queries.
This Q&A feature “interprets the question the user is asking and serves up the correct interactive chart or graph,” Microsoft said on Wednesday.
Microsoft also improved the Power Map functionality, which was formerly called GeoFlow. This Excel add-in lets users overlay geographic and temporal data on Bing Maps. Here’s a video demo:
Enhancements include “immediate geo-coding of geospatial elements of data coupled with new region-based visualization that color-codes these geo-political areas: zip code, county, state, country/region,” according to Microsoft.
“Users can also take the interactive tours designed in Power Map to create videos optimized for mobile, tablets/computer, and HD displays,” the blog post reads.
Finally, the Power Query add-in’s online search capabilities have been improved, and the number of available datasets increased.
Additionally, “Power Query now supports different merge options for more flexibility in building your queries,” the post reads.
Microsoft announced Power BI for Office 365 in July, describing it as a set of cloud-hosted tools designed to let regular business users do “self-service” advanced data analysis on Excel without the need to involve BI (business intelligence) experts. The data to be analyzed can be stored locally on users’ machines or in the cloud.
People interested in getting access to the preview version of Power BI for Office 365 can make a request.
It’s not clear when Microsoft plans to release Power BI for Office 365.