The two leaders in the BI market according to the Gartner 2021 report are Power BI and Tableau. Tableau has been around since 2003 and Power BI was launched in 2011 and added to the Office 365 suite in 2013.
Power BI
Power BI is a Business Intelligence software, that was added to the Microsoft family as a SaaS model. It is very closely related to Excel. It consists of a group of applications and services that are on the cloud. The main apps amongst others are Power Query, View, Pivot, Map, and Q&A. With its integration with Excel, it is very easy to create dashboards and reports, hence, it is the go-to tool for inexperienced BI users. Microsoft has added Power BI to its Power Platform which includes the Power Virtual Agents, Power Automate, Power Apps, etc.
Its disadvantages are that it offers less functionality than Tableau. Also, in order to get its full functionality, you need to install the SQL server and the Report Service.
Tableau
Tableau was introduced as a BI software in 2003. It is more powerful than Power BI. It is one of the go-to software for Data Visualization. Tableau has a strong user community and has an end-to-end solution that begins from collaboration, moves on to analytics, the discovery of content, preparation of data, access of data, and deployment. Tableau is more flexible than Power BI. The desktop version of Tableau can be installed without the installation of the SQL Server.
Its disadvantages are that it is much more expensive than Power BI and its learning curve is steeper than Power BI since it needs you to build your own data warehouse. Further, the Tableau licenses have incremental costs, and connecting to third-party service providers adds to the cost.
Similarities between Power BI and Tableau.
Both Power BI and Tableau can create a variety of Data Visualizations such as bar, line, pie charts, tree, geographical maps. The visualizations are interactive on both the software with them having features such as filtering, creating dashboards, etc. Both the software can be connected to various data sources, are user-friendly and require no coding.
Differences between Power BI and Tableau
Power BI works only with MS-Windows and can be easily integrated with Microsoft, however since Tableau has been acquired by Salesforce, its integration with Salesforce is easy.
R and Data Visualization
R is free software that was initially used for statistics and graphics. The R Core team and R Foundation for Statistical computing support its development. It has been under development since the early 1990s and is available under the GNU General Public License. It is available for various operating systems. Besides the command line interface, it can also be integrated with third-party GUI such as RStudio and various IDE such as Jupyter.
Since R is open source, it is extensible through functions, and packages. The R community is constantly contributing and improving its functionalities. Besides great libraries for Data Visualization, it has numerous libraries for statistics, linear and non-linear modelling, spatial, time series, machine learning, and artificial packages for classification, clustering, computer vision, etc.
Comparing R to Power BI and Tableau.
As an open source, R is free, it is being developed by a vast community of R Programmers and has the latest packages in most of the domains. Even though the learning curve is steep, its data visualization package is comparable to both Power BI and Tableau. Besides this it has great packages for Simulation, Machine Learning, Artificial Intelligence, etc.
References
https://spreadsheeto.com/power-bi-vs-tableau/
https://www.datacamp.com/community/blog/power-bi-vs-tableau
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R_(programming_language)