Tableau Desktop For Mac

Tableau Desktop is a part of Tableau Creator and lets you:

Works on Windows and Mac OS: Works on Windows and Mac OS: Tableau Desktop is ideal for Data Scientists, BI professionals, statisticians, etc. Tableau Public is more for bloggers, beginners, data analysts, BI enthusiasts, journalists, writers, etc. Apr 20, 2019 TabPy secure connections do not work for Tableau Desktop on MacOS. The current method for gathering certificates to perform client side validation in Tableau Desktop requires curl built with OpenSSL while MacOS uses DarwinSSL which does not share the same functionality.

Get actionable insights fast

Leave chart builders behind. Live visual analytics fuel unlimited data exploration. Interactive dashboards help you uncover hidden insights on the fly. Tableau harnesses people’s natural ability to spot visual patterns quickly, revealing everyday opportunities and eureka moments alike.

Connect to more data

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Connect to data on prem or in the cloud-whether it’s big data, a SQL database, a spreadsheet, or cloud apps like Google Analytics and Salesforce. Access and combine disparate data without writing code. Power users can pivot, split, and manage metadata to optimize data sources. Analysis begins with data. Get more from yours with Tableau.

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Answer deeper questions

Exceptional analytics demand more than a pretty dashboard. Quickly build powerful calculations from existing data, drag and drop reference lines and forecasts, and review statistical summaries. Make your point with trend analyses, regressions, and correlations for tried and true statistical understanding. Ask new questions, spot trends, identify opportunities, and make as well as the 'why.' Create interactive maps automatically. Built-in postal codes mean lightning-fast mapping for more than 50 countries worldwide. Use custom geocodes and territories for personalized regions, like sales areas. We designed Tableau maps specifically to help your data stand out.

Let everyone in on it

Ditch the static slides for live stories that others can explore. Create a compelling narrative that empowers everyone you work with to ask their own questions, analyzing interactive visualizations with fresh data. Be part of a culture of data collaboration, extending the impact of your insights.

Note: Listed price is an amount per month when billed annually.

Recommended (not minimum) Tableau Desktop System Requirements

We often talk at length about the hardware requirements for Tableau Server, but what about Tableau Desktop? In this post, I want to show you how a relatively inexpensive increase in your laptop or desktop hardware spec can go a long way to improving your Tableau Desktop experience and productivity.

According to Tableau’s tech specs page, the minimum requirements for running Tableau Desktop are:

  • Microsoft Windows 7 or newer (32-bit and 64-bit)
  • Microsoft Server 2008 R2 or newer
  • Intel Pentium 4 or AMD Opteron processor or newer
  • 2 GB memory
  • 1.5 GB minimum free disk space
  • 1366 x 768 screen resolution or higher

Similarly for Mac the requirements are:

  • iMac/MacBook computers 2009 or newer
  • OSX 10.10 or newer
  • 5 GB minimum free disk space
  • 1366 x 768 screen resolution or higher

Wow, that’s pretty low spec right? That would allow us to get Tableau up and running on some of the more sluggish PCs in the workplace right now, which is great news! But what happens when we want to connect to our large dataset and build some big dashboards that run lots of complex queries?

The fact is, if you’re going to be using Tableau on a regular basis, connecting to more than just a few thousand rows in an Excel file, and you’re planning on building out some workbooks with a moderate amount of complexity, then you’re probably going to want a better spec PC.

If we really want to Tableau ‘at the speed of thought’, then we should do our best to avoid timeouts and crashes caused by resource constraints, so here’s what I believe should be the recommended minimum system requirements for Tableau Desktop. Now for the disclaimer – these recommendations are based on my experience installing and using Tableau Desktop in many, many different customer environments:

  • 64-bit architecture only (come on people it’s 2017)
  • Microsoft Windows 7 SP2 or newer (or Microsoft Server 2008 R2 of newer)
  • Intel Core i3/i5 or AMD Athlon processor or newer
  • 8GB memory (to cope with large datasets and complex workbooks)
  • Solid-state drive (SSD) disk, with 5 GB minimum free disk space
  • IE9 or newer

“Prove it!”

Tableau

Now let’s put some science behind this. Well, some anecdotal science at least.

I decided to test Tableau’s performance in a Windows virtual machine in Parallels on my Mac, switching up the CPU and RAM and then comparing the time taken to do various tasks, for example, loading a datasource, viewing number of records, taking an extract etc.

In my first scenario, I set my Windows 10 virtual machine at 1 single vCPU and 2GB RAM, and for the second scenario, I boosted the spec up to 4 vCPU and 8GB RAM.

I settled on two tests to perform in each scenario:

Test 1

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Using a TDE file of 1.5GB in size and 21.3m rows, I dragged a dimension onto Rows, which will produce a list of 1.19m UK postcodes. I know is a silly thing to do but I wanted to see how long it would take to render.

Test 2

Using a 94MB CSV file containing a list of all UK Postcodes, I extracted the data into a local TDE saved in C:Temp. Extracting data in Tableau Desktop is a common practice and can often be rather time consuming, so it follows that if we’re working with Tableau all day every day, we want this to complete as quickly as possible.

Tableau Desktop 2019.4

Desktop

Between each test I shut down and restarted Tableau Desktop, there were no other Windows applications running on the VM. For reference, I used Tableau v10.2. The results are below:

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I think the results are pretty clear, in the higher spec machine we saw viz compute and extract times almost halve.

Now I appreciate that your results may vary, since this is a virtual machine on my Mac laptop rather than the real thing, but I hope this clearly illustrates how having a little more grunt in your work laptop can go a long way to greatly improving your productivity with Tableau!