Microsoft 70-210: Installing, Configuring and Administering Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional
#81. You are upgrading a computer from Windows 98 to Windows 2000 Professional. The computer is a 400-Mhz Pentium III, and has 128 MB of RAM and a 10-GB hard disk. You are performing the installation by 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 the installation?
#83. You want to upgrade 150 computers from Windows NT Workstation 4.0 to Windows 2000 Professional. You create a Unattend.txt file by using Setup Manager. You copy the file to a floppy disk. You then start the installation on a test Computer by using the Windows 2000 Professional CD-ROM. You insert the floppy disk after the computer starts. Although you had set the user interaction level to full unattended mode, you are prompted for all the required parameters. You want to ensure that the unattended installation does not prompt you for input.
#84. You want to upgrade some PCs in your company. They have different Hardware and use different peripherals. How can you check the compatibility while minimizing your work?
#85. You are the administrator of your company's network. A user named Veronica uses a shared windows 2000 Professional computer. The computer is a member of a workgroup. Veronica has encrypted five files on the computer to ensure the security of the files. Two of these encrypted files are needed for an important meeting. However, Veronica is out of the office until next week. You need access to the files immediately. You also need to ensure that Veronica can log on when she returns. You want to accomplish this with the least amount of administrative effort. You log on to Veronica's computer by using the local Administrator account.
#86. You encrypt three files to ensure the security of the files. You want to make a backup copy of the three files and maintain security setting. You have the option of backing up to either the network or a floppy disk.
#87. You are the administrator of your company's network. Your network has 200 windows 2000 Professional computers and 15 windows 2000 server computers. Users on the network save their work files in home folders on a network server. The NTFS partition that contains the home folders has Encrypting File System (EFS) enabled. A user named John leaves the company. You move all of the files from John's home folder to his manager's folder. When the manager attempts to open any of the files, she receives the following error message; "Access denied." You want the manager to be able to access the files.
#88. You are the administrator of your company's network. Your network has 75 windows 2000 professional computers and eight Windows 2000 Server computers. Users on the network drive save their work files in home folders on a network server. The NTFS partition that contains the home folders has Encrypting File System (EFS) enabled. The partition also has disk quotas defined. A user named Candy reports that she cannot save any files to her home folder. She also cannot update files in her home folder. When she attempts to save files to the folder she receives the following error message "insufficient disk space". Other users are not experiencing this problem with their home folders. You want to enable Candy to save files in her home folder.
#89. Each user in your network has his/her own user directory. Jane copies a file to her user directory and receives the message "insufficient space." She finds that she cannot even add data to a file and save it. Others are not having any problems.
#90. Julie is trying to save a file that is 2MB in size. When she tries to save the file, she gets an error message that the disk is out of space. When the administrator checks available disk space, it is determined that there is more than 4GB of free disk space.