Universal JSON to Microsoft Power BI

Automatically Export & Sync Universal JSON Data to Microsoft Power BI

Universal JSON
a black arrow pointing to the right
Microsoft Power BI
Full data sets
No instructions needed
No code
No complicated flow charts
No triggers
Set up in under 3 minutes
Flat pricing starting at $19 /month

Data sets

Uniform JSON Objects
Filterable
Varied JSON Objects
Filterable

Built for Synchronization

This service is designed to help anyone continuously export (i.e. "sync") data from Universal JSON.

If you only need to export your data one time, check the website of Universal JSON to see if their service offers a one-time export feature natively. Sometimes a Data Source's native export feature may provide not as much data as its API does, in which case Flatly is the solution.

Additional Information

Flatly uses official API channels to provide an integration with Universal JSON.
JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) is a lightweight data-interchange format.
JSON Hosting

Flatly can access JSON in the form of URLs (example: yourhost.com/data.json?auth=secret), behind Basic Authentication. Flatly does not ingest JSON from a file upload.

Large JSON Chunking

If you have tried on your own, using code, to flatten a large JSON file from a web service and are running into resource challenges (memory, CPU, storage), you either need to implement non-trivial chunking architecture yourself or use a turnkey service like Flatly. Flatly is designed to flatten JSON in resource-efficient way, and replicate it as a flat files in a cloud storage destination you control.

Scopes

Flatly's access to Plaid and Plaid's downstream connected financial institutions is read-only access to text. It is limited to account data (words, numbers, dates). It does not include any money-movement, transfer capabilities or account holder profiles/identities.

Plaid alone interfaces directly with financial institutions, caches data from those institutions on Plaid infrastructure, and then makes the appropriate scoped subset of that data available to partners like Flatly using secure connections called client libraries.

Opening CSV or XLSX in PowerBI

The cloud version of PowerBI reads XLSX or CSV files directly from OneDrive for Business. On the "Create" panel select either file format presented in the center of the screen. Then click Browse OneDrive.

PowerBI reads CSV or XLSX files directly from OneDrive for Business.

File Formats

Integration Flow

Setup

Step 1

Select Universal JSON from the Data Source dropdown and Microsoft Power BI from the Data Destination dropdown.

Step 2

Authorize Universal JSON with your credentials using the Basic Auth Headers flow.

Step 3

Authorize Microsoft Power BI with your credentials using the OAuth flow.

Step 4

Select your Data Set from the 2 Data Sets available using the dropdown.

Step 5

Click Flatten to sync your data.

Walkthrough Video

Extended Data Sources

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