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SAP gave a number of product updates this week at BI2014, but I think there are five key questions around the future of SAP Dashboards / Xcelsius which are still unanswered. They don’t seem like hard questions but I think the answers would be incredibly valuable to anyone planning their future SAP-based dashboard initiatives.

Once thing is very clear, SAP’s future for dashboards revolves around DesignStudio, Tammy Powlas quoted SAP in her SCN blog  :-

“The future is one tool for building a dashboard but it is not Lumira “ and

“Design Studio is the future of dashboarding for SAP".

What is much less clear is exactly where that leaves current Xcelsius and SAP Dashboard users. The key questions are :-

1) What does “convergence” really mean?

“Convergence not migration, no need to recreate.” (my emphasis)

This is consistent with SAP's promise that “there will be no forced migration” away from Xcelsius / SAP Dashboards, but is a little at odds with the plan for migration / conversion tools (see below).

The issue is that although it may be true that SAP will never tell you you have to recreate your Xcelsius dashboards, in the dynamic world of BI, you must always move forward. The idea of leaving your existing dashboards in a tool which is no longer being actively developed makes no sense and neither does having two tools long term particularly when one (Xcelsius) which is aimed at Excel-capable users and the "real power" of other (DesginStudio) comes from having a JavaScript programming engine.

Therefore, migration takes on a big significance, and so the next three questions deal with this topic.

2) What should we expect of migration tools ?

Migration/conversion tools were first mentioned in the 2012 statement of direction but no specific details have emerged since. The latest from the roadmap is that at some point in the future (probably at the end of 2014 at the earliest) there will be :-

“Migration support for standard BEx Web and (Xcelsius) Dashboards” or

“Migration support for select BEx Web and (Xcelsius) Dashboards”

depending on the version of the roadmap you have.

The big question is what do “standard” and “select” mean?

Obviously the expectation is that some but not all dashboards will migrate across. Even if it is not possible to give complete details of this, an outline of the key features being targeted and those which are unlikely to make the list would be very helpful.This leads to to questions about key specific features :-

3) Will DesignStudio ever support QaaWS, LiveOffice or BI Web Services?

QaaWS, Live Office and to a lesser extend BI Web Services are the most widely used connections for Xcelsius so it would be helpful to know if there are any plans to support them going forward in DesignStudio or provide any sort of migration for them.

4) Will spreadsheet logic ever make it to DesignStudio ?

As all Xcelsius users know, it is pretty much impossible to create a meaningful Xcelsius dashboard without using Excel formulas (except if you use XWIS Advantage, but that is another story) and so knowing if it will be possible to migrate Excel logic to DesignStudio would give a good indication of what we can expect from migration.

5) What is the difference between “no new features” and “maintenance mode” ?

This last question is probably less important but it is something that I am confused about. It is based around two statements from SAP at BI2014 this week (again reported by Tammy Powlas in her blog referenced above) :-

“New functionality and features will only happen in Design Studio”

“No plans to end of life Xcelsius but it will be put into maintenance mode at some point”

It seems to me that if you are not adding features to a product then it is in maintenance mode already, but if SAP have a specific meaning to “maintenance mode” then again I think it would help clarify things to know what the difference is.

If any of these questions have been answered elsewhere then please can someone post links to the answers below, or if someone from SAP wants to post answers (either here or elsewhere) that would be very welcome too. I suspect there are a lot of people in the wider Xcelsius community who would love to know.

By way of full disclosure, I work for Antivia and we produce a dashboarding tool (DecisionPoint) which integrates smoothly with the BOBJ platform (as well as non-SAP data sources) and we believe appeals more to the Xcelsius designer than the DesignStudio developer approach.

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