Windows 2000 Server
You are the network administrator for your company. The company has numerous branch offices, and each office uses Internet Connecting Sharing to connect to the Internet. A new employee named David Johnson is configuring a Windows 2000 Server computer as a file server. When David uses Windows update for the first time and select Product Update, he receives an error message stating that access is denied. David needs to be able to update the file by using his account. What should you do?

Give David's user account administrator privileges on the Windows 2000 Server computer
None of above
Instruct David to log on as a domain administrator on the Windows 2000 Server computer
Configure the settings for Internet Connecting Sharing to allow SMTP access
Configure the settings for Internet Connecting Sharing to allow POP3 access

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Windows 2000 Server
Some applications on your company network use defined domain user accounts as their service accounts. Each computer that runs one of these applications should have the respective service account in the Local Administrators Group. Currently, you individually place these service accounts in the Local Administrators Group on the appropriate Windows 2000 Professional computers. You need to centralize this process. What should you do?

Add the applications service accounts to the Local Administrator Group. Use the Restricted Groups option in a Domain Group Policy
None of above
Add the applications service accounts to the Local Administrator Group. Use the Restricted Groups option in each computer's local group policy
Add the applications service accounts to the Domain Administrator Group
Add the applications service accounts to the Local Administrator Group. Use the Restricted Groups option in an OU Group Policy

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Windows 2000 Server
You install your boot volume on volume C on your Windows 2000 Server computer. You mirror volume C on dynamic Disk 1. Two years later, during routine server maintenance, you open Disk Management and find that the status of volume C is Failed Redundancy. The status of Disk 1 is Missing. You attempt to reactivate Disk 1, but the status of volume C does not return to Healthy. What should you do next?

Rescan the disks, remove the mirror, and delete the data on Disk 1. Then re-create the mirror
Replace Disk 1 and copy all data from volume C to a new NTFS primary partition on the new Disk 1. Restart the computer
Replace Disk 1 and restart the computer. The mirror will automatically regenerate
None of above
Remove the mirror on Disk 1, replace the disk, and then add back the mirror to the new Disk 1

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Windows 2000 Server
Your Windows 2000 Server computer contains a stripe set with parity on a four-disk array. You convert the stripe set with parity to a dynamic RAID-5 volume. Six months later, users report that disk access on the server is slower than it had been on the previous day, You use Disk Management and discover that the status of the third disk in the array is Missing. You want to recover the failed RAID-5 volume. What should you do first?

Replace the third disk and restart the server. Use disk Management to repair the volume
Ensure that the third disk is attached to the server and has power. Use Disk Management to repair the volume
Ensure that the third disk is attached to the server and has power. Use Disk Management to reactivate the disk
None of above
Install a new disk and create a single extended partition on the new disk. Restart the computer and allow Windows 2000 to automatically repair the volume on the extended partition

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Windows 2000 Server
You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 Server computer that has FIVE hard disks. Four 100 GB hard disks on the server are configured as a single stripe volume. You want to reconfigure the fourth disk so that the volume is fault tolerant and has as much space possible available for storing data. You want to use only existing hardware. What should you do?

None of above
Backup the data on the stripe volume and delete the stripe
Backup the data on the stripe volume and delete the stripe volume. Create a mirror volume, shut down and restart the server. Restore the data to new mirror volumes
Convert the disk to dynamic disk shut doWn and restart the server
Backup the data on the stripe volume and delete the stripe volume. Create a raidS volume on the four disks, restore the data to the new raid5 volume

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Windows 2000 Server
You install a Windows 2000 Server computer on your network. You place several shared folders on a 12-GB primary partition formatted by FAT32. During nine months of continuous operation, the number of users who access the server and their access frequency remains constant. The average size of the files on the server remains approximately constant. After the server runs continuous for nine months, users report that the server does not retrieve files from the shared folders as fast as when you first installed the server. What should you do to resolve the problem?

Convert the disk that contains the shared folders to a dynamic disk
Move the paging file to the partition that contains the shared folders
None of above
Convert the partition that contains the shared folders to NTFS
Defragment the disk that contains the shared folders

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