![]() If you’ve been considering a Dell Venue 8 Pro ( at Amazon) and a Plugable Pro 8 Dock ( $89 on Amazon) that video will give you a good idea what they’re capable of. I recorded it all though so you could enjoy it too. ![]() Here’s a picture of it sitting on my desk, begging me to open it so we could play. This week all that waiting paid off and the dock came in. I jumped in pretty early at the $50 level and patiently (or not so patiently) waited for it to be released. It sounded too good to be true, but it wasn’t. It charges the DV8 Pro, and has all the common dock accoutrements. I was pretty excited earlier this year when Plugable started a Kickstarter project for a dock specific to the DV8 Pro, the Pro 8 Dock. I’ve been using a Plugable UD-3900 with my Surface Pro 2 since I got it and I’ve been very happy with it. Over time, a few solutions have popped up for that problem. in Math see the problem there, you can’t hook up any peripherals if you need to charge the tablet. And that USB port is used for charging, as well as for hooking up peripherals. While the DV8 Pro is a nearly perfect and flawless device, it does have one minor annoyance, it only has one USB port. Many months ago I bought a Dell Venue 8 Pro tablet and I love it. So please, read my Host Name Site Collection article and let me know what you think. In this article I explain what HNSCs are, and how to use them, and give you some PowerShell you can use to create some HNSCs of your own. There’s good news though, I recently published at, The Case for Using SharePoint Host-Named Site Collections. Some out of confusion and some out of fear. Unfortunately, getting your head wrapped around the complexity of HNSCs can be daunting, and many SharePoint administrators haven’t embraced them. SharePoint 2013 provides a much healthier option, the Host Named Site Collection, or HNSC. None of those things are good for your soul. In previous versions of SharePoint there were some ugly workarounds to deal with this, but they involved AAMs, lots of web applications, and ancient incantations. ![]() Site collections that have the cursed /sites/ managed path in their URL has been the bane of SharePoint administrators for generations. ![]()
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