Piwik PRO vs BigQuery
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Piwik PRO ships steady fortnightly fix releases with quiet integration improvements.
Recent releases (18.59 through 18.66) follow a tight bi-weekly cadence dominated by analytics bug fixes — chart tooltips, scheduled-report PDF rendering, sorting and pagination edge cases — interleaved with smaller integration improvements: Google Ads account-switching, expanded AI-referral domain detection, sequential-audience sort and filter, in-app contact form. No directional moves in this window.
The product is in maintenance-and-polish mode, focused on the edges where reports, exports, and integrations break. The most signal-bearing recent change is broader Google Ads account management plus more domains classified as AI-driven traffic — small hints at where buyers are asking for sharper analytics.
Expect Piwik PRO to keep shipping defect-density patches at this cadence, with what feature growth there is concentrated in AI-traffic attribution and Google Ads tooling rather than core analytics primitives.
BigQuery doubles down on Iceberg, graph, and global data sharing as the lakehouse fight intensifies.
BigQuery's May 2026 ship list is dominated by three tracks: open-format lakehouse integration (Iceberg v3 with deletion vectors, REST catalog support in Conversational Analytics), graph capabilities maturing inside BigQuery Studio, and global data exchange via multi-region sharing listings reaching GA. Alongside the feature work, Google is tightening Data Transfer Service security (MFA on Google Ads transfers) and warning about Ads retention changes that will cap historical backfills from June 1. The release notes show a mature warehouse continuing to absorb adjacent workloads rather than reinventing itself.
BigQuery is positioning itself as the federated query and sharing fabric for a multi-format world, with Iceberg getting closer to first-class status and Conversational Analytics extending across external catalogs. The graph and notebook work signals a push to keep more analytical work inside Studio instead of bouncing to specialized tools. Expect continued layering of governance, AI-assisted query, and open-table support on top of the existing engine rather than core engine reinvention.
Next obvious step is GA for Iceberg v3 features and full conversational graph querying without Preview gating. Watch for additional first-party data sources getting MFA mandates, mirroring the Google Ads tightening.
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