​​​​​Curator Product Roadmap

Transcript
Hello everyone, welcome to the Curator Product Roadmap webinar. I think everybody is probably here and so we'll go ahead and get started. If this is your first time on an InterWorks webinar, welcome. We're so glad you're here. If you're returning, we're happy to see you again as well. So today's webinar will be recorded. So look out for a replay that will hit your inbox in the next couple of days. Throughout the webinar, if you have any questions at all, feel free to use the Q&A function for questions. We like to use that instead of the chat just to make it a little bit easier. But as we dive in, just to catch you up on a few things, if you are new to InterWorks and what we do, we have a couple of things on the screen just talking about what we are, what we stand for, who we are, just some insight into our philosophy, our specialties, and more. We're global and we're ready to help you with whatever tech problem you might have. If you haven't visited our blog, you should definitely check that out and find out a little bit more about who we are. All sorts of information is shared there. It's a really helpful resource and something that you might find very valuable. This webinar is presented by the InterWorks Curator team, and we do webinars like this all the time. Curator, we'll dive into a little bit more, but Curator is a software that InterWorks provides to help with embedded analytics and Tableau. On this page, it's a little bit of an overview of what we do. As you can see, it's across the board. It's a little bit of everything data here at InterWorks. Often Mark or I will hear people say, "Oh, we didn't know that you could help us with this." Insert the blank. Data, Tableau, platforms. And a lot of times you can get siloed into just working with us for Curator or something like that. And so we like to call out that, hey, we can help you with all sorts of different things, not just Curator, not just even Tableau. Across the board, we help out with all sorts of technical issues or problems. My name is Derek Austin, and I'm the Curator platform lead here at InterWorks. I've been with InterWorks for almost eight years at this point, and most of that has been Curator. I've been with the Curator team since we first launched the product. In my role as platform lead, I look at the overarching platform of the software and how we implement it in various client organizations, various client infrastructures. I have with me Mark Bingham. Mark, you want to do a quick intro? Sure thing. Thanks, Derek. Yeah, my name is Mark Bingham. I am the experience lead for Curator. So I cover client experiences in terms of things like onboarding and helping you get set up and connected and making sure that you have all the resources you need whenever you're working through and using Curator. In addition, I also help make sure that our product improvements are getting great design feedback. So, making the tool easier to use, giving you a lot more guardrails along the way. So that way you don't have as many questions and that things are a little more self-explanatory. So speaking of explaining things, we should probably do a quick intro in terms of, for anyone new, what Curator is and what it does. So Curator at a really high level, just a quick intro. When you've got a lot of disparate content, whether it's content that's on your Tableau server or content that cuts across platforms like Power BI and Tableau or any other tools, Curator allows you to centrally host all of that content in a way that makes sense for your audience rather than having to adhere to any sort of source system-type platform. So when you have an executive who oversees a large group or you have a lot of clients who are getting data from different systems, those aren't always organized with that end audience in mind whenever people are building it and deploying it. But when you want to present it to someone, being able to present those analytics, that information, and those decision-making tools in a way that makes sense for those audiences, that's one of the biggest things that Curator helps you accomplish is reducing the barrier to entry to discovering what information you have access to. On top of that, the large advantage of using Curator is being able to put forth your brand to establish trust between the people who are sifting through and analyzing and validating and transforming and shipping and moving all the data. There's a huge amount of effort that goes into that whole process. I'm sure many of you on the call understand what it's like to go through a large-scale data project. Being able to put your brand and your group's name on something to establish that trust to say, "Hey, this is where the data is coming from. You know our brand. You know us. You know you can trust us." Being able to make sure that's the first foot forward really helps establish a direct connection between the people who you're supporting or the people who you're giving information to, to help them with their decision-making process. And then in addition to that, the big advantage too of Curator is that it's a no-to-low code situation. So there are some areas where you can customize and modify and tweak things on your own. But we aim to be as user-friendly as possible. So the infrastructure and the setup required to get connected to all those analytic systems are as easy as filling out a form, clicking submit, and filling out drop-downs from there to turning toggles on and off. So the administrative interface is extraordinarily straightforward and really easy. So with that, today we're focusing a lot on our exciting new updates and a little bit of some forward-looking things. So I wanted to do, I've got a combo here of a few things that have been just recently released, as well as a few things that are up and coming. So I'm going to go ahead and grab the screen share here. Make sure this is, alright. So you should be able to see the back end of my Curator interface here. So when you land on Curator at the home page, we have a, even we don't always have things configured exactly as they need to be, so we have a few items to update here. We need to take a backup. We've got some information about emails that might be helpful for whenever we have any connection issues. So we aim to make sure that on the back end, we're constantly improving and getting updates in front of you early so that way you can head off any issues that you see out front. So I'm going to clean this up a little bit here. In addition to that, we have a couple of new items. And let me actually go ahead and jump in here. Oops. Actually, this is a perfect example. So here on the home page, we have a pretty new unique default header image, default home page. So if you were to, you know, go walk through a new installation or spin up a new server, you're going to see a page that looks like this. And so a lot of you might be thinking, hey, that image that cuts across the top, that's a pretty handy addition. So being able to use something like that is what we refer to as a hero image. And so in addition to building out this hero image on the back end, there's also, you know, some copy content in here, some random dashboards that I've added in, and then another set of random dashboards down here. This is just a pretty standard out-of-the-box installation with some Tableau Public visualizations. So it's not the most thoroughly designed, but our aim is with some of this default prepackaged content that you're able to get up and running a lot more quickly. So with the addition of some of those page building options that we have in here, we've migrated some of our home page options into the page building type. So we have a little notice that's letting me know, "Hey, we've gone in, made some changes to the way you might want to pick your home page." So you'll see a lot. This list has gotten a lot smaller from where it used to be. That's because anything that you don't see in this list is now available in our page builder for you to create as a new piece of content. So now I'm able to go in and actually just select from pre-built content that I have in my pages rather than needing to select, you know, I want my three most recent dashboards, but I want them to be ordered by user favorites and then featured. Those are all controls and things that we can take advantage of inside of our page builder system. So on that note, and you will see this is a test version of our new instance, so there are going to be a few new notable updates to the page building layout here. So the first thing to notice is it's quite a bit closer of a one-to-one in terms of the way that the front end and the back end look. So we're aiming to get as pixel-perfect as possible when you're in this preview mode. But I can go ahead and say, you know, create a new page here, and pretty quickly, I can go in and add my hero image. One thing that we've actually added as well to the page builder system is the ability to upload images directly from page builder. So you no longer have to go out to our file section, upload it there, come back. So with that, there's a lot of new centralization to this page builder. We're aiming to make it across the board, whether it's bringing in dashboards from different systems or creating a new specific landing page for a certain group, that you're doing less back and forth across different systems or different areas of Curator and that you're able to get access to all of the different pieces of content you need on one single system. So let's just go ahead and grab my header image in here. The other really nice thing that you'll notice is that we've added some row and element styling options in here. So the ability to go in and, say, change the gutters that I have on the side of my elements as we cut across the page. If you've been a client of ours for a little while, you may be familiar with us jumping in and adding in some custom code or some custom styling to get around some of these things. Our major goal is to make sure that as you're tweaking and modifying and changing the way your pages look, that those are things that you can start to manage in terms of the layout, the look and feel, even just some of the spacing. So, you know, something as simple as I want to add in a new element here and say, bring in some text. I'll have this. We'll center-align this and then make this a little bit bigger, bold it, and now I have a header image. Previously, to move things around on a page, we'd have to jump in, maybe edit some of the styling. And in the future, I'll be able to just change my pixels here. That adds a little bit of a gap. And so I can add a little bit of breathing room, add a little bit of spacing around different elements. And I can control all those styles right here in this page builder style editor. In addition to some of those styling controls, we're also working on making sure that we're improving all the pieces of content. So not just as is, but giving you a little more flexibility in terms of control over elements that have previously lived in the home page, the way that you're selecting some of the style or, sorry, some of the content selections for things like tiles. One major improvement that we'll notice, and actually, I am realizing I'll need to jump over here to show this new one off. So this one is not quite in our new system yet. But in order to, I'll jump back here to go grab this in just a sec, actually. So there's an Explorer update. I'll jump back here in a sec. But moving on with what's in this current beta version, we have another piece of content in here called tabbed pages. Oops. Let's see on the first page. And so this gives us the ability to actually insert other pages that I've already created. So maybe I want to go ahead and add in a couple of sample pieces of content that I've already got out there. I can rename my tabs if I'd like, and then I now have sortable options where I can nest pages inside of a page. So now you can distribute maybe some of the workload, have certain people own pages, but, ultimately, that gets centralized into one specific area. So, again, just making some of that content more discoverable, a little bit easier to find, and a little bit easier to manage. One thing, another major addition is the ability in here to add in data groups. So if you're familiar with our Data Manager, it's a way for you to add in forms or inputs to allow users to add data. So what that looks like, I'll show you an example here. I have this little sample estimates table. And I'll go ahead and add this in as a specific estimates type. So I have here my list of data inside of my table, and then I have the ability down here to add new items. So I've already got a sample set up here. So let me go ahead and grab that. And I'll look at this on the front end. So from the page editor, I've added a little bit of text in here. I've added my Data Manager estimates, and I've added it as a table here. So I can go in and actually see this list of data. And then I can add in, you know, I'll add in my name, and then I'll do a nice new estimate. So I add that, and then it immediately gets added to my table up here. You'll notice that there is an option here to just have the form. So I could update this and save this. And now I've very easily added in the ability to just simply add a form. So this could maybe be my name, you know, the data that I want to input. You could also use this as a sort of contact us form and tie an email to the form submission. You can add in more fields. There's different logic that you can add for dependencies on what fields show up based on which selections that you make. So again, things that we had been allowing you to manage and control across different areas of the product now being consolidated into one easy-to-use page builder system. So let me go ahead and jump over to this new Explorer update. And there is a very real probability that I might hit an error here. Alright. Give me one second. Mark, while you're grabbing that, there was a question in the chat about how you can get data back out of the data forms, and I can address that real quick. I put it in the chat, but just so everybody knows, the data that you insert in there basically goes into the database behind Curator. So it's a MySQL connection. If you are doing a direct connection to Curator, very easy to set that up. You could set it up in Tableau. You can blend the data back into a Tableau dashboard, or maybe it's part of some ETL process or something like that. A lot of things that you can do with that data when it's in the data layer there. If you are using it for Tableau, though, there's also a web data connector so that you don't have to worry about connecting to a database or anything like that. You can literally just pull the data with the web data connector and utilize it that way. So a couple of different ways to address that depending on your needs. Yeah. And just a heads up too, I don't know that we have the, I believe we have the web data connector elsewhere on here. But for that, any ETL processes or getting an individual user connected out there, we do have that info on our documentation as well. Alright. Thank you for jumping in and addressing that one, Derek. Appreciate everyone's patience while I get that set up. So with this new Explorer view, you'll notice that there's a few new options in here. Oh, and actually, you know what? Alright. My apologies. So if I want to go in and say add a new keyword, which our keyword system is basically, it's a way for you to associate certain terms with different types of content. So it's kind of like a tagging system. So let's say I wanted to add in, you know, region-specific dashboards. And so I can tag my New York City region or my New York City dashboard as something that's inside of a region. And then I can maybe say sales dashboards. And then I'll just keep this simple, and I'll have one per. Now I can go in and create this. So now I have two keywords that I can start associating content with. But now when I go out to my page builder and I want to add in the Explorer view, which is a list of tiles of all of the content that the user has access to with a search bar up at the top so they can sift through and look at that content, currently we list your menu system as one way to filter the Explorer view and then all of your keywords as the second category. So what we've added in are controls to explicitly use specific keywords in different sections. So in my first title, I can just say this is my region section, and I want to add my region keyword as an option there. And then I'll call this my sales section, and then I'll add my sales keyword to this one. So from here, I can start looking at my preview, and you can see that I have, I can change my title here, and I have my region keyword. I have my custom title here for sales, and I can bring in my sales keyword. So it gives you a lot more flexibility in terms of what shows up, how you're adding that content, how people are going to filter it, how things are going to be categorized. So again, giving you a little bit more flexibility in terms of managing content and allowing people to discover it. I actually have one last feature to walk through really quickly here. And I'll jump back over here. Close these out. Clean this up a little bit. Alright. So now that I have, you know, a lot more control around the styling and the look and feel of specific pages, sometimes I might want to say surface a form when somebody doesn't have access to something, and they can go fill out a contact us form whenever they hit an access denied page. Right now, if I were to go to a page that I don't have access to, I just see sort of a generic system default: "You don't have access to this page." And this is actually available today in our current release as of last month. We can now override those system defaults by giving you the ability to create a page and then associate that with different types of errors that a user sees. So I've created this not found page. So if I go out here and visit a fake URL, I've got this whole page set up. So I have a little splash image that lets people know, "Pretty confident that what you're looking for is not available." You can add in any kind of content that you want below this. So it gives you a little bit more flexibility and control around, again, showing people certain messages or redirecting them to certain links. So oftentimes we have clients either have a form that they fill out down here or add in copy or email links. It's also especially really helpful. So this is for not found errors, and you can also control this for access denied. In addition to that, there's one last piece I wanted to mention. If there's ever any sort of connectivity issues out to your Tableau server, we also have this as a feature underneath the five zero three, so whenever Curator's having trouble communicating out to Tableau. So instead of just seeing a generic "things are down," and currently it mentions Tableau Server, if you don't want your audience to know that that's the issue that you're running into, we can always modify that, and you can modify it and give your users a customized message. So in addition to that, there are a few other things to note just in terms of some updates that are going to be coming. So on just, like, a short-term horizon, some of the things that the experience group is working on are things like more global site-wide styling controls. So this includes things like, you know, global font controls, easier theming, so being able to import and export themes more seamlessly, being able to control things both at a global and more granular level, so things like action buttons and controls on embedding dashboards in the pages. In addition, we're working on some improvements to the menu structure, so being able to filter and sort content more quickly when you're managing and maintaining your menus. And then in addition, like a lot of the page builder stuff I was showing off earlier, making sure that we're keeping things consistent between dashboards and pages. And so those are getting unified in our system. And then some minor tweaks on filters, really just things to help you make sure that you've got everything configured and optimized correctly. So better hints and better suggestions on how to set things up. And then a continued improvement on our search functionality. So being able to discover content more quickly, searching deeper through text on pages or data that you've got connected to. So those are the things that we're going to be focusing on in the future. And as always, very interested and happy to hear any feedback you all have. So if you are an existing customer, feel free to reach out to your support team and let us know what's on your mind. Or if you have any questions, feel free to drop them in the Q&A. But with that, I'll pass it over to Derek. Thanks, Mark. So I'll go ahead and share my screen. We have a lot of cool things happening on the platform side that I'd like to talk through. In particular, one of my favorite things that's coming up is actually something you can look at today, and that's a big change to our Curator website. If you hover over this Get Started, it used to give you a big overview of the platform. You could dig into the resources to figure out how to get started, but now we have this installation page. The installation page gives you all of the information you need to get started on any particular platform that you might be using. So if I was spinning up Curator on Ubuntu, I can click into that very easily, get up and running with five simple steps. So really cool addition, especially for you guys hopping into Curator for the first time. If you've been with us for a long time, it's very possible that you installed Curator right alongside a technician. But these days, it's something that is very quick and easy and simple to do on your own, and this page helps facilitate that. One new addition that I am excited to announce is Curator is now on the AWS Marketplace. And so you don't have to install any software to use Curator. You can actually just go to the AWS Marketplace, search for it and spin it up. There's two different ways to do that even. You can use an existing license that you purchased from InterWorks, but if you don't have a Curator license yet, you can actually pay for it right there in AWS alongside the EC2 instance that you're spinning up. And so just to walk through that really quick, it's a very simple process. You come into AWS, into your standard area where you would spin up an EC2 server. But instead of this quick start area, click on AWS Marketplace, type in Curator, and voila, you have the two options. The top one, of course, is the, "Hey, I'm paying for the Curator license right here in AWS," and then the Bring Your Own License version at the bottom. It's one that you basically plug in a license key to. Either one of these, though, are an amazing way to get started with Curator because you don't have to install anything. It's ready there in AWS. You just click a couple of buttons and you're up and running. So a very cool addition as far as getting started with Curator. Another really interesting one that I'm excited about is we're actually in the Okta app catalog as well. Okta, if you're not familiar, is a single sign-on vendor. It's one that a lot of our clients use. It's very common and it's very easy to work with, but now it's even easier because connecting to Curator once it's in the app catalog is just a couple of clicks. I actually made a demo video to our team earlier this week on how to do this, and it was like two and a half minutes long. And that was even me talking through some of the technical specifics. But very, very quick and easy. You can actually just go in here and click Browse App Catalog, type in Curator, look for this Curator by InterWorks, and then click Add. The only thing you have to do to configure at that point is give it the URL to Curator and then take the information that Okta gives you and just plug it into the Curator system. So very, very quick process, very easy to get connected with Okta now as well. So some pretty exciting updates on that front. Hopping into Curator itself though, we have been doing some pretty massive overhauls to the backend system. And you'll start seeing these in our April release actually, which is slated for next week. In particular, if you've connected to Tableau Server in the past, then you'll know that it's under the settings area, Tableau, and then Tableau Server settings. This has worked great for many years, but at this point we started reorganizing the back end into ways that make more sense. And so in our April release, this will get moved a little bit to this new integrations area. The integrations area has all of your connections underneath it, and you might catch what I said there, connections, plural, and that's because in April's release, we are actually introducing the ability to connect to multiple Tableau servers within a single Curator instance. You'll still have one that your users authenticate against, and it's your primary one where it goes and it says, "Hey, is Derek a valid user? Yes or no?" But from there, you can branch out to other Tableau servers just like you could sites in the past. It'll check your permissions, it'll pull those in, and merge the two systems together as far as your users are concerned. But there's actually something else that's interesting about the connections area, and you might have seen it. I actually saw it on Mark's screen when he was demoing earlier. That is ThoughtSpot. Tableau has been a big piece of what makes Curator Curator for many years, but you might know we've added Power BI support in the past, and now we are also adding ThoughtSpot. And so in this connections area, you can choose a ThoughtSpot server, Tableau server, Power BI, and all of those pieces will be all in one spot here. And so those connections merge together all of those platforms as well, so your users have this one-stop shop for all their reporting needs, regardless of if it's Tableau Server or Power BI or even ThoughtSpot. And so I'm just demoing the ThoughtSpot stuff a little bit since it is new. ThoughtSpot has a lot of different ways that we could tie in and we can integrate with it. We started with a couple of those: live boards or pin boards, ThoughtSpot searches, or you can even embed the full app. So just looking at a little bit of how those work, I'll go over to the front end of our website. And ThoughtSpot has this concept of live boards that you can pull in once it loads. By the way, loading images as they were in Tableau Server, you can also use them in ThoughtSpot. But here's a ThoughtSpot live board that we can use. We can interact with just like you could a Tableau dashboard. ThoughtSpot also has this search area as well, so we can dive into our datasets and find out more about them just right here in Curator alongside our Tableau content, alongside our Power BI content, or whatever we happen to have in the system. I can easily interact with that and get my data out. Then the final connection at this point is the full app experience. ThoughtSpot actually allows you to embed the whole thing right in there. So you can do that very easily and you can allow your users to have this custom landing page that ThoughtSpot offers. Now there's a couple of ways to set those up. Any LiveBoard or ThoughtSpot search you set up in this ThoughtSpot area in your navigation. And so you can click in, you can do LiveBoard, new search and give it the information that's required for that. Very easy. It's kind of like setting up the Tableau dashboards if you've done that in the past. Or Mark was demoing some page features. And if you go into the pages area, you can actually add that information directly into your page in the page builder. So pulling up a page real quick, underneath analytic elements, which is new, by the way, in the April release, you'll see this ThoughtSpot information. So you have the ability to do a ThoughtSpot full app or LiveBoard or ThoughtSpot search right here in the page builder so you can merge it literally side by side with your other content. With that, I will jump back to our PowerPoint real quick and open it up for questions, actually. Well, Derek, we did have one in the chat really quick I wanted to mention. Absolutely. Jacob was wondering if he needs to do anything as it relates to the new integration or connection on an existing setup. That's a great question. So you don't. All of your existing setup will be migrated to the new integrations area. Ideally, you don't run into any hurdles there. It's completely seamless when you just grab the next upgrade. It will be in the integration area automatically. And then I did want to mention, Lee also asked a question in the chat on the page builder for adding, once you have content added in, this is something I didn't mention in the demo earlier. When you have content added in, you can move items up and down the page. So if I add, say, a header image or a text block, previously, I would have to copy that, paste it, recreate it. You now have the ability to go in and move things around on a page that already exists. No more recreating things from scratch that you already made. Awesome. Howard has a pretty technical question here. He's asking, he has an IIS-based install on Windows, and he's asking if he needs to migrate that to Apache, which is what our current installs would be on. Howard, the quick answer to that is you can leave it on IIS, and that's perfectly fine. We do have quite a few customers using IIS currently, and it works perfectly fine. New installs will be on Apache, and it's a bundled installation, kind of like Tableau Server. When you install Tableau Server, it has Apache behind the hood, and so it's all in one place. But there's no need to get rid of that or migrate to a new server. You can continue using the IIS version and that will continue to be supported at this time as well. Joseph has a question about upgrading a very old version of Curator and the process behind that. That's a really great question as well. So if you have a really old version of Curator, there are a couple of approaches to upgrading. What we tend to recommend is upgrading a few versions at a time, a stepped process. And the reason is there's a lot that goes into a Curator upgrade, database migrations, code migrations, that type of stuff. If you do a couple of steps at a time, that usually helps it go a little smoother. You can certainly try a full-fledged upgrade all at once, and that will usually work. I would always, when you're talking about going multiple versions, make sure that you have a full backup before you start upgrading though, because jumping a lot of versions can definitely be the scarier side of upgrades versus keeping it up to date once a month upgrading. Lee had a question about what we've shown today and when things will be available. Some of the things we've shown today, Lee, will actually be available now if you're on the March release. A lot of them will be in April's release. Some of the page builder elements in particular that Mark showed will be in the May release, actually, so another month out. Derek, there's another question from Howard in the Q&A specifically about, are there any improvements from going from dev or stage to production? Yeah, the import/export areas are the typical approach for that, and we're constantly improving that and working on that area. So if you haven't used it recently, I highly recommend that. In particular, there's an API area where you don't even have to download a file and move it to the other one. You can just click a couple of buttons and select the content that you want to move up. And so I would say if you haven't tried that in, like, the last six months, there's probably some massive, massive improvements there. And there's always a small trickle of updates to that area as well as we continue to build things. That area is constantly getting better and better. Yeah, and I will say Howard as well, we're working on some updates to make sure that those migrations are more granular. So you have a lot more control over what you can import and export. I know some of our things like portal settings are really tied together. So we're working to make sure that you have more control over that. So you can definitely keep an eye out for some of those changes coming soon. Those are probably a little past the May release to get those. And that's what I mentioned with those theming options to make styling things distinct from settings. So whenever you maybe have a particular home page type or a specific font type on one system or another, you can start bringing over those styling options and then leave things like your SSL configuration or your Tableau authentication settings. I think the stuff that Derek was showing off in terms of the new connections, that's going to make migrating a lot of those things much smoother. So migrating Tableau server settings over will no longer require re-authenticating. So that whole migration process is definitely going to continue to get a lot easier. And I would just add, if you have any specific needs or requests for that, put that in the chat. We'll make sure to add that to our backlog. Awesome. As we wrap up today, just a quick reminder, if you aren't getting monthly updates from Curator about new features and upcoming things and blogs, let us know. We would love to get you on our mailing list so that you can know more right as things come out. There's always really exciting new things on there. We also have a survey coming up after the webinar. When you close down Zoom, it should pop up automatically in your browser. We would love to hear from you and hear how things are going and how we can better improve Curator as well. So, there was another question in chat about an iOS app. So I'll go ahead and take that one. So we had a beta version of an app in place. One of the things because of how security works, and this would be an app going to a website, going to another system like Tableau, there's certain limitations that are just inherent to that. And so basically what would end up happening is that you would have a browser that is an app. So it wouldn't provide a lot of additional functionality. So our focus has been more on making the mobile experience better because the whole process of getting something into the App Store, especially if it's not the Curator logo and brand, but someone's company or tool is a lot of work. And so we felt like there was a lot more value in just continuing to make the core of Curator mobile-friendly. If there's demand for that, that's definitely something we want to hear though. So please let us know. And as we wrap up, I'll just throw out there one other thing. I mean, we talked about integrations today for both Power BI and ThoughtSpot. That is an area that we're continuing to invest in, making it easier to bring the other tools that you use into your life. So if there are other things that you would like to see, send us an email, put it in chat. Those are definitely things we're gathering information on now. Awesome. Well, thanks for joining today, everyone. Again, please fill out the survey. We would love to hear from you about things that we can do to make your lives better with Curator and analytics in general. Have a good one. Bye. Thanks everyone.

In this webinar, Derek Austin and Mark Bingham showcased Curator’s latest product updates and roadmap. Mark demonstrated new page builder features including hero images, tabbed pages, data manager forms, custom error pages, and enhanced Explorer views with keyword filtering. He highlighted improved styling controls and the ability to upload images directly within the page builder. Derek announced Curator’s availability on AWS Marketplace and integration with the Okta app catalog for simplified authentication. He unveiled multi-Tableau server connectivity and introduced ThoughtSpot integration alongside existing Tableau and Power BI support. The presenters addressed audience questions about data extraction, migration processes, and upgrade strategies throughout the interactive session.

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