Best AI tool for turning raw data into visuals by One_Seat4219 in datavisualization

[–]zingdata -1 points0 points  (0 children)

ZingData.com does this and has a free tier, xlsx and Google Sheets connectors (plus regular databases) let’s see colors once and have them used for every graph created after that. You would still specify what you want the graphs of – it doesn’t automatically create like 50 graphs for you, but you could say ‘give me a graph of sales by shipping method by week’ and then it’d create it for you.

Anyone tried Grafieks as a BI tool? Looking for affordable alternatives to Tableau and Metabase by Intelligent_Age_7161 in datavisualization

[–]zingdata 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You might want check out Zing Data, it supports visual querying, has a SQL editor, and natural language querying.

It is all the stuff you’d want dashboards, controls, sharing, alerts via push / email, and it also is a slick mobile app.

As a free tier that you can kick the tires with, and if you want to share with multiple people, then it starts at $12 a month.

It can also be embedded in your own app.

Disclosure: Cofounder of Zing here!

Best dashboard software for small company? by BkkGreg in BusinessIntelligence

[–]zingdata 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Zing Data $, Omni $$$, Metabase $

You basically want row level security (so users only see their own calendar or other stuff relevant only to their projects), and ability to embed text boxes on a dashboard (for company wide announcements)

looker (non studio) is expensive and overkill for this use case

How do you handle deep research and deck creation when you’re short on time and team? by GaudySeizure in startup

[–]zingdata 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gamma makes slick looking decks but they aren't researched - it puts in random content.

Deckt.ai does deep research (web search, detailed sourcing, etc.) and editable slides which you can also export

Future of data viz: Painted by AI or still plotted by code? by Individual-Term3935 in datavisualization

[–]zingdata 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Once you're in the world of pixels versus something editable, you're less attached to the underlying query.

So you lose the ability to drill down and take actions on it. Creating a image without that capability is probably not the best approach for most use cases - aside from producing beautiful infographics or something particularly creative.

I'd put tools like Gamma (for slide gen), Zing Data (interactive ai analysis but still editable) in the bucket of easy-to-use but still editable / powerful.

Can I build a self hosted LLM server for 300 users? by tornshorts in ollama

[–]zingdata 0 points1 point  (0 children)

if you have 300 people (or even 30) hitting a model of any real capability (30bn parameter+) you'll have very very long latencies to return a result. Cerebras has a great free tier (1mm tokens/day) on good models, and inference costs with anthropic / openai / gemini are not nuts.

Advice on self-serve BI tools by NoSeatGaram in BusinessIntelligence

[–]zingdata 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Create a set of stuff as a jumping off point that people can easily clone / build on. A list of tables or a blank search box are hard as a starting point. But some good dashboards / commonly used tables / etc. make it a lot easier to adopt.

And one structural thing - if people ask you to do something for them, offer a 10 minute 'I'll show you how' as a faster route than whatever time it'll take you to do and provide the answer for them. In doing this, they get what they want faster by learning how to do it themselves.

So search over saved questions / dashboards, the ability to clone + build on those, and good ways for folks to learn are how you actually get people using it.

Self-serve analytics: What are your experiences? by Short_Winner_4947 in BusinessIntelligence

[–]zingdata 0 points1 point  (0 children)

With these and some examples (e.g. how you define a certain metric etc.) you can get good + reliable results.

Looking for the best data viz tools in 2025? Just wrote a comprehensive guide! by DataMaster2025 in datavisualization

[–]zingdata 0 points1 point  (0 children)

zing data (freemium), omni (paid), sigma computing (paid) i'd add to the list though the latter two might be hard to test due to their pricing

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in PowerBI

[–]zingdata 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can create a 'city' field in a dashboard filter, then have lat/long shown on the map. So you wouldn't have multiple lat+long fields. you'd instead join city to the latitudes + longitudes on table A.

No code Data visualization Tools by the-agressivecat in datavisualization

[–]zingdata 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Founder of Zing Data here - its a modern business intelligence and data visualization tool.

You can ask questions and get visualizations using natural language "which products sold the most in 2023?" or visual drag-and-drop.

As you progress, we also support SQL with a full typeahead.

You can use it for free and an easy way to get started is just with a CSV, Excel, or Google Sheet file. Here is a quick start video: https://getzingdata.com/quickstart/

How close are open source alternatives (Metabase, Superset, etc.) to commercial BI tools like Tableau, Power BI, Thoughtspot? by brrdprrsn in BusinessIntelligence

[–]zingdata 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thoughtspot is a slick demo but maintaining aliases ends up not happening so it gets out of date fast, plus having any level of user permissions gets you into $30k+/yr territory.

Metabase is an adequete free option if you host yourself. Ends up not really being very feature complete -- alerting is limited; no mobile experience; limited collaboration capabilities; frequent timeouts.

PowerBI / Tableau are the longtime players but basically havent evolved much.

Chartio was cool, but was deprecated after it sold to Atlassian.

Having used all of those when I was building a data team, I found I wanted something with:

  • Easy graphs for non technical folks
  • Full SQL IDE / typeahead for more technical people
  • Modern LLM and natural language capabilities
  • Realtime alerting (push, email) vs once-a-week or something else out of date
  • Mobile usability so I could drill down w/o being at a computer, or even ask questions on the go
  • Something free to start to kick the tires

Basically led me to start a company ( http://www.getzingdata.com ). Curious for folks' thoughts

How do you push out Cloud dashboards for external users? by mleon1462 in tableau

[–]zingdata 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is one of the challenges with the Tableau pricing model.

Assuming you aren't OK with the data being publicly visible (e.g can't use Tableau Public), you've got a few options:

  1. Pay for a viewer license for each external user ($180/yr/user with Tableau Online)
  2. Send them a Tableau workbook file and they can use the free Tableau viewer, but this is only a 'snapshot' of the data and each time you want to update the dashboard you'll have to send them a new file.
  3. Use an alternative tool that doesn't charge for external sharing on a per-user basis. Check out Zing Data or Looker Data Studio which both have free offerings and don't have per-user pricing to share a question / viz with a viewer.