Windows 2000 Server
The network uses TCP/IP as the only network protocol. You configure the remote access server on the network. Some users report that when they connect to the server they receive the following message |" IPX SPX compatible computer deported error 733" The EPP control network protocol for the network is not available. If the users allow the connection to continue they are able to connect to the services that use TCP/IP. You want to prevent this message from being displayed. What should you do?

Configure the remote access server to allow IPX based remote access demand dial connections
None of above
Configure the client computer to use a defined IPX network address for the connection to the remote access servers
Configure a client computer to use only TCP/IP for the connections to the remote access server
Configure the remote access server to disable multi-link connection

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Windows 2000 Server
How can you assign an application to one processor exclusively?

None of above.
Open Task Manager, chose Performance, chose view all processors, assign processes to appropriate processor
Open Task Manager, chose options from task bar, select processor and assign processes to appropriate processor
Right click on application process in Task Manager, select Set Affinity, and select the appropriate processor
Right click on application executable, select properties and select assign processor

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Windows 2000 Server
You are the administrator of a network that consists of a single Windows NT 4.0 domain. The network contains five Windows NT Server domain controllers and 1,000 Windows NT Workstation client computers. You want to install Windows 2000 Server on a new computer. You want the new computer to act as a domain controller in the existing domain. What should you do?

On the new computer, install Windows NT Server 4.0 and designate the computer as a BDC in the existing domain. Promote the computer to the PDC of the domain. Upgrade the computer to Windows 2000 Serve
On the new computer, install Windows NT Server 4.0 and designate the computer as a PDC in a new domain that has the same NetBIOS name as the existing Windows NT domain. Upgrade the computer to Windows
Shut down the PDC of the existing Windows NT domain from the network. On the new computer, install Windows 2000 Server, and then run the Active Directory Installation wizard to install Active Director
Shut down the PDC of the existing Windows NT domain from the network. On the new computer, install Windows 2000 Server, and then run the Active Directory Installation wizard to install Active Director
None of above

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Windows 2000 Server
How can you recreate the PTR record in your Windows 2000 DNS server from you Windows 2000 client?

None of above
Create a host file with the #DYNAMIC command on the client computer
Run ipconfig all /registerdns from the DNS server
Start the DNS Dynamic service on your client computer
Run ipconfig /registerdns from the client

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Windows 2000 Server
Five Lakes Publishing has a Windows 2000 network serving 200 users. A server named User_srv is used to hold users' files. User_srv is configured with a single, large NTFS volume. Every user has a home folder on User_srv. Users can also use a shared folder named IN_PROGRESS to store files for books that are being prepared. The network administrator at Five Lakes Publishing configured disk quotas for the NTFS volume on User_srv. All users have a default limit of 100 MB, and the option to deny space to users who exceed their limit has been enabled. When a user named Amy Jones attempts to save a chapter of a new book to her home folder on the server, she receives the following error message: "The disk is full or too many files are open." What should Amy do to allow this document to be saved?

None of above
Remove files from her home folder until the total uncompressed file size is less than 100 MB
Move some of the files from her home folder to the IN_PROGRESS shared folder
Change the security setting of some of the files in her home folder to grant Full Control permission to a user who has not reached the quota level
Compress the files in her home folder to save disk space

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Windows 2000 Server
Your network is configured as shown in the exhibit. "Engineering! and Salesl have DHCP installed up them." All the servers are Windows 2000 Server computers that use TCP/IP as the only network protocol. The sales department uses one subnet and has servers named Salesl and Sales2. The engineering department uses another subnet and has servers named Engineeringl and Engineering2. Salesl and Engineeringl are configured to act as DHCP servers. The router that joins the two subnets is not RFC 1542 compliant and does not support DHCP/BOOTP relay. You want to allow Salesl and Engineeringl to support client computers on each other's subnets. What should you do?

Configure Engineering2 and Sales2 as DHCP servers without any scopes
Set the router option in the DHCP Scopes to 192.168.2.1 for Engineeringl and 192.168.1.1 for Salesl
None of above
On Engineering2 and Sales2, install Routing and Remote Access, and configure RIP as a routing protocol
On Engineering2 and Sales2, install and configure the DHCP Relay Agent service

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