You are configuring 5 computers to use both Windows NT workstation 4.0 and Windows 2000 Professional. Each computer has an 8GB hard disk. You configure that hard disk on each computer to have two 4GB partitions. Windows NT workstation is installed on drive C. Windows 2000 Professional is installed on drive D. In Windows 2000 Professional you configure a disk quota on drive D to prevent users from saving work files on the disk. You restart the computer and load Windows NT workstation.You notice that users can still save files to drive D.You want to prevent users from saving files to drive D in either operating system. You also want to ensure that users can access both drives using either operating system. What should you do on each computer?A.Use Windows 2000 Professional to configure drive D as a dynamic volume.B.Use Windows 2000 Professional to enable Encrypting File System (EFS) on drive D.C.Use Windows NT workstation to configure NTFS permission on drive D to deny the users write permission.D.Reinstall Windows NT workstation after configuring the disk code task.
You are the desktop administrator for Ezonexam.com'ssalesdepartment. Ezonexam.com's network contains a RIS server.You need to install Windows 2000 Professional on a computer that has a SCSI disk subsystem. You start the computer by using the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM, and you begin the installation.However, Setup reports that it cannot find any disk on which to install Windows 2000 Professional.You start the computer by using a RIS bootable floppy disk, and you receive the same result.What should you do?A.Add an answer file to the root directory of the RIS bootable floppy disk. Start the computer by using the RIS bootable floppy disk, and run Setup by using RIS.B.Add the SCSI-controller driver to the root directory of the RIS bootable floppy disk. Start the computer by using the RIS bootable floppy disk, and run Setup by using RIS.C.Start the computer by using the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM, and run Setup. After Setup starts, provide an answer file on a floppy disk.D.Start the computer by using the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM, and run Setup. After Setup starts, provide a SCSI-controller driver on a floppy disk.E.Start the computer by using the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM, and run Setup. After Setup starts, provide the appropriate HAL on a floppy disk.
You are the network administrator for Ezonexam.com. Your computer has a CD-ROM drive attached to a SCSI adapter. You plan to upgrade your computer from Windows NT Workstation 4.0 to Windows 2000 Professional. You determine that the SCSI adapter is not included on the current Hardware Compatibility List (HCL) and that the original SCSI drivers that you used for Windows NT are not compatible with Windows 2000 Professional.You want to upgrade your computer to Windows 2000 Professional.What should you do?A.Replace the SCSI adapter card with a Windows 2000 Professional compatible SCSI adapter. Start the installation from the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. Add the new adapter card drivers when you are prompted.B.Obtain Windows 2000 drivers from the SCSI adapter manufacturer. Copy the drivers to C:\Winnt folder. Start the installation from the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM.C.Obtain Windows 2000 drivers from the SCSI adapter manufacturer. Start the installation by using the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. Add the new adapter card drivers when you are prompted.D.Modify Config.sys to use your existing SCSI adapter and existing CD-ROM drive. Using Windows NT 4.0, start the installation by running Winnt32.exe from the I386 folder on the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM.
You are upgrading computer1 and computer2 from Windows NT Workstation 4.0 to Windows 2000 Professional. You successfully upgrade computer1. During the upgrade of computer2, a series of power outages interrupts the upgrade.You discover that the upgrade of computer2 is incomplete. Furthermore, you find that computer2 can no longer run Windows NT workstation 4.0. Computer2 does not support booting from the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. You decide to use computer1 to help recover the failed upgrade.What should you do?A.On computer1, copy the CD-ROM driver and system files named ntdetect, ntbootdd.sys, Ntdll.dll and Setupldr.bin to a formatted floppy disk. On computer2, restart the computer by using the floppy disk. Then run WinNT32/debug from the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM.B.From computer1, copy the CD-ROM driver and system files named Ntdetect, Ntbootdd.sys, Ntdll.dll, and Setupldr.bin to a formatted floppy disk. On the computer2, restart the upgrade by using the floppy disk. Then run WinNT32/rx from the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM.C.On the computer1, run Makebt32.exe from the Bootdisk folder on the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. On computer2, restart the upgrade by using the newly created floppy disks.D.On computer1, perform. a remote installation from a network share. On computer2, when the text portion of setup has completed, resume the installation by using the Setup Manager.
Your network includes Windows 98 computers and Windows 2000 Server computers. You are adding a new computer to the network, and you plan to install Windows 2000 Server on the new computer. The computer has one 20-GB hard disk with no partitions defined.The Windows 2000 Server CD-ROM is unavailable. You want install Windows 2000 Server from source files that are located on a server on the network. You also want the entire hard disk of the new computer to be used for the system partition.What should you do?A.On another Windows 2000 computer, use Makebt32.exe to create installation startup disks. Start the new computer by using the first disk.B.On another Windows 2000 computer, format a floppy disk. Copy NTLDR, Boot.ini, Ntdetect.com, Ntbootdd.sys to this disk. Start the new computer by using the disk.C.Start the new computer by using a Windows 98 network boot disk. Connect to the network server. Run Dsclient.exe. Create and format a 20-GB FAT32 partition.D.Start the new computer by using a Windows 98 network boot disk. Create and format a single FAT32 partition. Connect to the network server. Run Winnt.exe.E.Start the computer by using a Windows 98 network boot disk. Create and format a single FAT32 partition. Start the new computer by using a Windows 2000 Emergency Repair Disk.
Your Windows 2000 Server computer has a 10-GB hard disk with two partitions: Drive C and drive D. Windows 2000 Server is installed on Drive D. Both partitions are formatted as NTFS. Your office experiences a power failure that causes your Windows 2000 Server computer to restart.When the computer is restarting, you receive the following error message "NTLDR is missing. Press any key to restart".What should you do?A.Start the computer by using Windows 2000 Server computer CD-ROM and choose to repair the installation. Select the Recovery Console and copy the NTLDR file on the CD-ROM to the root of the system partition.B.Start the computer in debugging mode. Copy the NTLDR file on the CD-ROM to the root of the system partition.C.Start the computer by using the Windows 2000 bootable floppy disk. From a command prompt, run the sfc/scanboot command.D.Start the computer by using a Windows 2000 bootable floppy disk. Run the File Signature Verification utility.
You are preparing to install Windows 2000 Server on a new computer. The computer is connected to a network that includes Windows 98 computers and Windows 2000 Server computers.You want to install Windows 2000 Server from source files that are located on a server on the network.What should you do?A.Start the new computer by using a Windows 98 network boot disk. Connect to the network server. Run Winnt32.exe.B.Start the new computer by using Windows 98 network boot disk. Connect to the network server. Run Winnt.exe.C.On a Windows 2000 Server computer, use Makebt32.exe to create installation startup disk. Start the new computer by using the first disk.D.On a Windows 2000 computer, format a floppy disk. Copy NTLDR, boot.ini, Ntdetect.com, Ntbootdd.sys to this disk. Start the new computer by using the disk.
You are configuring five computers for Windows NT Workstation 4.0 and Windows 2000 Professional.Each computer has an 8 GB hard disk.You configure the hard disk on each computer to have two 4 GB partitions. Windows NT Workstation is installed on drive C and Windows 2000 Professional on drive D.In Windows 2000 Professional, you configure a disk quota on drive D to prevent users from saving work files on the disk. You restart your computer and load Windows NT Workstation. You notice that users can save files to drive D.You want to prevent users from saving the files to drive D in either operating system. You also want to ensure that users can access both drives while using either operating system.What should you do?A.Use Windows 2000 Professional to configure drive D as a dynamic partition.B.Use Windows 2000 Professional to enable encrypting file system on drive D.C.Use Windows NT workstation to configure NTFS permissions on drive D to deny the users write permission.D.Reinstall Windows NT Workstation after configuring disk quotas.
You want to upgrade your MS Windows 98 computer to Windows 2000 professional. Before the actual installation, you want to know whether your system’s hardware or software is compatible with Windows 2000 professional or not. What you will do. ()A、Consult the HCL.B、See the online documentation of Windows 2000 professional. C、Run WINNT32/CHECKUPGRADEONLY.D、Consult the technical support team of Windows 2000.
You plan to upgrade a computer that runs Windows 2000 to Windows XP Professional. You need to verify that the applications currently installed on the computer will run after the upgrade. What should you do before you start the Windows XP Professional installation?()A、From the Windows XP Professional source files, run winnt.exe /u. B、From the Windows XP Professional source files, run Winnt32 /checkupgradeonly.C、Review the Windows Hardware Compatibility List on the Microsoft Web site. D、Start the computer from the Windows XP Professional installation CD. When prompted, press F6.
You are the network administrator for Company.com. Your computer has a CD-ROM drive attached to a SCSI adapter. You plan to upgrade your computer from Windows NT Workstation 4.0 to Windows 2000 Professional. You determine that the SCSI adapter is not included on the current Hardware Compatibility List (HCL) and that the original SCSI drivers that you used for Windows NT are not compatible with Windows 2000 Professional. You want to upgrade your computer to Windows 2000 Professional. What should you do?()A、 Replace the SCSI adapter card with a Windows 2000 Professional compatible SCSI adapter. Start the installation from the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. Add the new adapter card drivers when you are prompted. B、 Obtain Windows 2000 drivers from the SCSI adapter manufacturer. Copy the drivers to C:/Winnt folder. Start the installation from the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. C、 Obtain Windows 2000 drivers from the SCSI adapter manufacturer. Start the installation by using the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM- Add the new adapter card drivers when you are prompted. D、 Modify Config.sys to use your existing SCSI adapter and existing CD-ROM drive. Using Windows NT 4.0, start the installation by running Winnt32.exe from the I386 folder on the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM.
You install a Zip device on your Windows 2000 Professional computer. You reboot your computer only to find out that the computer does not respond at all. You reboot into Safe Mode, and again, the computer does not respond. How do you recover from this problem?()A、Use the listsvc command to disable the Zip device driverB、Select Recovery Console from the Recovery Menu.C、Use the disable command to disable the Zip device driverD、Select the Debug mode from the Windows 2000 Advanced Options menuE、Insert the Emergency Repair Disk and specify the path of the recovery file on the hard diskF、Start the computer using the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM.
You are the desktop administrator for Company.com’s sales department. Company.com’s network contains a RIS server. You need to install Windows 2000 Professional on a computer that has a SCSI disk subsystem. You start the computer by using the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM, and you begin the installation. However, Setup reports that it cannot find any disk on which to install Windows 2000 Professional. You start the computer by using a RIS bootable floppy disk, and you receive the same result. What should you do?()A、 Add an answer file to the root directory of the RIS bootable floppy disk. Start the computer by using the RIS bootable floppy disk, and run Setup by using RIS. B、 Add the SCSI-controller driver to the root directory of the RIS bootable floppy disk. Start the computer by using the RIS bootable floppy disk, and run Setup by using RIS. C、 Start the computer by using the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM, and run Setup. After Setup starts, provide an answer file on a floppy disk. D、 Start the computer by using the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM, and run Setup. After Setup starts, provide a SCSI-controller driver on a floppy disk. E、 Start the computer by using the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM, and run Setup. After Setup starts, provide the appropriate HAL on a floppy disk.
Your computer has Windows 2000 Professional installed. Your office has a power outrage while you were running the disk defragmenter utility on your computer. When you start the computer again, you receive the following message: "Bad or missing OS". What should you do?()A、Start the computer in safe mode and reformat the hard disk.B、Start the computer in the debug mode and reformat the hard disk.C、Start the computer using the ERD and repair the Master Boot Record.D、Start the computer by using the Windows 2000 Professional CD-Rom. Then use recovery console to repair the Master Boot Record.
You are configuring 5 computers to use both Windows NT workstation 4.0 and Windows 2000 Professional. Each computer has an 8GB hard disk. You configure that hard disk on each computer to have two 4GB partitions. Windows NT workstation is installed on drive C. Windows 2000 Professional is installed on drive D. In Windows 2000 Professional you configure a disk quota on drive D to prevent users from saving work files on the disk. You restart the computer and load Windows NT workstation. You notice that users can still save files to drive D. You want to prevent users from saving files to drive D in either operating system. You also want to ensure that users can access both drives using either operating system. What should you do on each computer? ()A、Use Windows 2000 Professional to configure drive D as a dynamic volumeB、Use Windows 2000 Professional to enable Encrypting File System (EFS) on drive DC、Use Windows NT workstation to configure NTFS permission on drive D to deny the users write permissionD、Reinstall Windows NT workstation after configuring the disk code task
You are a helpdesk technician at Company's main office. You have been assigned the task to upgrade all 350 client computers from Windows 98 to Windows 2000 professional. All client computers in your office are configured with identical hardware. However, several different peripheral devices are used throughout the company. Users are not allowed to manage their workstations. Many of the users have installed software, changed video settings and compressed their hard drives using DriveSpace on their Windows 98 computer. You create a Setup.txt file by using Setup Manager. You run Winn32 /Unattend:Setup.txt on one of the Windows 98 computers. The installation fails with an error message. You want to upgrade the Windows 98 computer to Windows 2000 Professional. What should you do? ()A、Rename Setup.txt to unattend.txt. Run Winnt32 /Unattend:Unattend.txt.B、Connect the Windows 98 computer to the Internet. Rerun Winnt32 /Unattend:Setup.txtC、Uncompress the hard disk on the Windows 98 computers to disable DriveSpace. Rerun Winnt32 /Unattend:Setup.txt.D、Create a bootable floppy disk that contains and automatically runs Winnt32 /CheckUpgradeOnly. Boot the Windows 98 computer with the floppy disk.
ou need additional storage space on your Windows 2000 Professional computer. You install a second SCSI controller and a second hard disk. During the installation of the SCSI driver, you receive a warning that the driver is unsigned. You complete the installation of the driver and restart Windows 2000 Professional. During startup, you receive a Stop error. You need to correct the error and start Windows 2000 as quickly as possible. What should you do?()A、Start the computer in Recovery Console. Delete the SCSI controller driver.B、Start the computer by using the last known good configuration.C、Start the computer by using the Windows 2000 startup floppy disks, and repair the system files.D、Start the computer by using the Windows 2000 startup floppy disks, and repair the registry.
You are configuring five computers for Windows NT Workstation 4.0 and Windows 2000 Professional. Each computer has an 8 GB hard disk. You configure the hard disk on each computer to have two 4 GB partitions. Windows NT Workstation is installed on drive C and Windows 2000 Professional on drive D. In Windows 2000 Professional, you configure a disk quota on drive D to prevent users from saving work files on the disk. You restart your computer and load Windows NT Workstation. You notice that users can save files to drive D. You want to prevent users from saving the files to drive D in either operating system. You also want to ensure that users can access both drives while using either operating system. What should you do?()A、Use Windows 2000 Professional to configure drive D as a dynamic partitionB、Use Windows 2000 Professional to enable encrypting file system on drive DC、Use Windows NT workstation to configure NTFS permissions on drive D to deny the users write permissionD、Reinstall Windows NT Workstation after configuring disk quotas
You are upgrading computer1 and computer2 from Windows NT Workstation 4.0 to Windows 2000 Professional. You successfully upgrade the computer1. During the upgrade of computer2, a series of power outrages interrupts the upgrade. You discover that upgrade of computer2 is incomplete. Furthermore, you find that computer2 can no longer run Windows NT workstation 4.0. Computer2 does not support booting from Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. You decide to use computer1 to help recover the failed upgrade. What should you do? ()A、On computer1, copy the CD-ROM driver and system files named ntdetect, ntbootdd.sys,Ntdll.dll and Setupldr.bin to a formatted floppy disk. On computer2, restart the computer by using the floppy disk. Then run WinNT32/debug from the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. B、From computer1, copy the CD-ROM driver and system files named Ntdetect, Ntbootdd.sys,Ntdll.dll, and Setupldr.bin to a formatted floppy disk. On the computer2, restart and upgrade by using the floppy disk. Then run WinNT32/rx from the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. C、On the computer1, run Makebt32.exe from the Bootdisk folder on the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. On computer2, restart the upgrade by using the newly created floppy disks. D、On computer1, perform a remote installation from a network share. On computer2, when the text portion of setup has completed, resume the installation by using the Setup Manager.
You are upgrading a computer from Windows 98 to Windows 2000 Professional. The computer is a Pentium III - 400 MHz, has 128 MB of RAM and a 10-GB hard disk. You are performing the installation using the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. After the text mode installation portion is complete, you restart the computer. The BIOS virus checker on your computer indicates that your computer is infected with a master boot record virus. What should you do before you continue with the installation? ()A、 Remove the virus checker in Windows 98. B、 Disable the ‘BIOS virus checker’ and restart the computer. C、 Run Fixmbr.Exe from the Windows 20000 Professional CD-ROM. D、 Modify the Boot.ini to include a signature parameter on the ARC path of the system partition.
You are the administrator of your company's network. Your network has 20 Windows 2000 server computers in the contoso.com domain. Your network also has 250 Windows 98 computers. You want to perform a clean installation of Windows 2000 Professional on all of the Windows 98 computers. All of the Windows 98 computers are identical models and are PXE complaint. You want to accomplish the following goals: • An unattended installation of Windows 2000 Professional will be performed. • An unattended installation of company's standard applications will be performed during the installation of Windows 2000 Professional. • Each computer will be assigned a unique security identifier description. • The unattended installation script will be modified so that the computers automatically join the contoso.com domain. You take the following actions: • Install Windows 2000 Professional on a Windows 98 computer named computer1. • Install and configure computer standard applications on computer1. • Use Setup Manager on computer1 to create an unattended.txt file based on the current configuration including domain membership. • Start the remaining Windows 98 computers and then install Windows 2000 Professional. Use the unattended.txt file to provide the setting for the installation. Which result or results do these actions produce?()A、 An unattended installation of Windows 2000 Professional will be performed.B、 An unattended installation of company’s standard applications will be performed during the Installation of Windows 2000 Professional.C、 Each computer will be assigned a unique security identifier description.D、 The unattended installation script will be modified so that the computers automatically join the contoso.com domain.
You have a computer that runs Windows XP Professional. You need to create a floppy disk to start Windows XP Professional on the computer if the start files become corrupt. What should you do?() A、From the Windows XP Professional computer, run diskcopy.exe /v a:.B、From a computer that runs Windows 98, create a MS-DOS-based startup disk. C、From the Windows XP Professional computer, create an Automated System Recovery (ASR) disk. D、From the Windows XP Professional computer, format a floppy disk. Copy the NTLDR, ntdtetect.com, and boot.ini files to the floppy disk.
You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. You are configuring eight computers to use both Windows NT Workstation 4.0 and Windows 2000 Professional. Each computer has a 10 GB hard disk. You configure the hard disk on each computer to have two 5 GB partitions. Windows NT Workstation is installed on drive D. Windows 2000 Professional is installed on drive C. In Windows 2000 Professional, you configure a disk quota on drive C to prevent users from saving work files on the disk. You restart the computers and load Windows NT Workstation 4.0. You notice that users can still save files to drive C. You want to prevent users from saving files to drive C in either operating system. You also want to ensure that users can access both drives while using either operating system. What should you do on each computer? ()A、Reinstall Windows NT Workstation 4.0 after configuring the disk quotasB、Use Windows 2000 Professional to configure drive C as a dynamic partitionC、Use Windows 2000 Professional to enable Encrypting File System (EFS) on drive CD、Use Windows NT Workstation 4.0 to configure NTFS permissions on drive C to deny the usersWrite permission
You are the desktop administrator for your company. You need to upgrade a Windows 98 computer to Windows XP Professional. Windows 98 is installed in a folder named C:/Win98. You need to ensure that the computer's applications and settings are retained after the upgrade. You insert the Windows XP Professional CD-ROM into the computer and restart the computer. The text-based portion of Setup appears. The text on the screen states that Windows XP Professional will be installed in a folder named C:/Windows, not in the C:/Win98 folder. You need to ensure that Windows XP Professional upgrades the existing Windows 98 installation. What should you do?()A、Rename the C:/Win98 folder to C:/Windows. B、Modify the installation settings in the text-based portion of Setup so that Windows XP Professional is installed in the C:/Win98 folder. C、Restart the computer by using Windows 98. Then insert the Windows XP Professional CD-ROM into the computer and run Setup from the CD-ROM. D、Use the Windows XP Professional CD-ROM to create a set of Setup floppy disks. Restart the computer by using the first floppy disk in the set to launch Setup.
单选题You are the administrator of Red Lington Enterprises. You want to upgrade 125 computers from Windows NT Workstation 4.0 to Windows 2000 Professional. You create an unattend.txt file by using the setup manager. You copy the file to a floppy disk. You then start the installation on a computer in the test lab using the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. After the computer starts you insert the floppy disk. Even though you set the user interaction level to full-unattended mode you are prompted for all the configuration parameters. You want to ensure that the unattended installation does not prompt you for input. What should you do? ()AAdd a [data] section to unattend.txt, and set the unattended install Parameter to YES.BAdd an [Unattended] section to unattend.txt, and set the OemPreinstall parameter to Yes.CRename unattend.txt on the floppy disk to winnt.sifDCreate a /$oem$/$1 folder on the hard disk of the test computer, and copy unattend.txt to thefolder.
单选题You plan to upgrade a computer that runs Windows 2000 to Windows XP Professional. You need to verify that the applications currently installed on the computer will run after the upgrade. What should you do before you start the Windows XP Professional installation?()AFrom the Windows XP Professional source files, run winnt.exe /u. BFrom the Windows XP Professional source files, run Winnt32 /checkupgradeonly.CReview the Windows Hardware Compatibility List on the Microsoft Web site. DStart the computer from the Windows XP Professional installation CD. When prompted, press F6.
单选题You are upgrading computer1 and computer2 from Windows NT Workstation 4.0 to Windows 2000 Professional. You successfully upgrade the computer1. During the upgrade of computer2, a series of power outrages interrupts the upgrade. You discover that upgrade of computer2 is incomplete. Furthermore, you find that computer2 can no longer run Windows NT workstation 4.0. Computer2 does not support booting from Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. You decide to use computer1 to help recover the failed upgrade. What should you do? ()AOn computer1, copy the CD-ROM driver and system files named ntdetect, ntbootdd.sys,Ntdll.dll and Setupldr.bin to a formatted floppy disk. On computer2, restart the computer by using the floppy disk. Then run WinNT32/debug from the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. BFrom computer1, copy the CD-ROM driver and system files named Ntdetect, Ntbootdd.sys,Ntdll.dll, and Setupldr.bin to a formatted floppy disk. On the computer2, restart and upgrade by using the floppy disk. Then run WinNT32/rx from the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. COn the computer1, run Makebt32.exe from the Bootdisk folder on the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. On computer2, restart the upgrade by using the newly created floppy disks. DOn computer1, perform a remote installation from a network share. On computer2, when the text portion of setup has completed, resume the installation by using the Setup Manager.