Today we are known the availability of the project code name "GeoFlow" Preview for a result of collaboration between several teams within Microsoft Excel 2013. You can visually represent GeoFlow geographical and temporal data and analyze the data in 3D to create interactive "tours" to share with others.
GeoFlow was developed in Microsoft Researchfrom the successful WorldWide telescope project for scientific and academic communities to explore large amounts of astronomical and geological data. Researchers worked closely with the Office product teams initiate GeoFlow from his research lab founding this public preview available in Excel. GeoFlow adds to the existing self-service-business intelligence-functions in Excel 2013, such as Microsoft Data Explorer Preview and power view to help detection and visualization of large amounts of datafrom Twitter traffic to sales development on population data in cities all over the world.
GeoFlow allows you to:
Map data: More than 1 million rows of data from an Excel workbook, including the data model of Excel or Gemini, Bing Maps3D plot. Visualizations, select columns, heat maps, and bladder.To discover insights: Discover new knowledge through your data in the geographical area to see and to see, time stamp data, that change in the course of time. Comment or compare data with a few clicks.Swap stories: "Scenes" to capture and build cinematic, guided "tours", which on the whole, can be shared, appealing audience like never before.Development is now possible GeoFlow insights into geospatial data such as ticket sales.
You go to learn more about how people already use GeoFlow, to gain and share knowledge in conjunction with existing self-service business intelligence tools in Excel, Excel Blog.
Download the add-in for Excel 2013 with Office 365 ProPlus or Office Professional plus 2013.
Learn more about Microsoft BI.
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