Windows 2000 Server
You have just configured two Windows NT Servers, Monitor 1 and Monitor 2 with no other software installed. You have an application server that needs to be monitored for performance to figure out what it's problem is, or to get some kind of baseline. You install Network Monitor on Monitor 2. What would you do to monitor Application server?

Install Network Monitor on Monitor 1
Configure Monitor 2 and Application server as monitoring partners (or something) to monitor the performance
Configure the network monitor ECP port something for TCP
Install Network Monitor on Application Server
Configure the network monitor EDP port something for UDP

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

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Windows 2000 Server
You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 server computer. The server has a single hard disk with two partitions. An application that runs on your server creates a very large log file in the SystemrootYTemp folder. There is not enough free space on the system partition to accommodate the log file. The application does not provide a way to change the path to the log file. You want to run the application on your server. What should you do?

None of above
Add a second hard disk. Delete the contents of the SystemrootYTemp folder. Create and format a partition from the free space on the second hard disk. Mount the partition as the SystemrootYTemp folder
On the second partition, create a shared folder named Temp
Add a second hard disk. Create and format a partition from the free space on the second hard disk. Create a Temp folder on the new partition. Mount the system partition as the Temp folder on the new p
In the systemroot folder, create a shortcut named Temp that points to the second partition on the disk

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Windows 2000 Server
You install the Routing and Remote Access service on a Windows 2000 Server computer in your network. Your network is not directly connected to the Internet and uses the private IP address range 192.168.0.0. When you use Routing and Remote Access to dial in to the server, your computer connects successfully, but you are unable to access any resources. When you try to piiig servers by using their IP addresses, you receive the following message: "Request timed out." When you run the ipconfig command, it shows that your dial-up connection has been given the IP address 169.254.75.182. What should you do to resolve the problem?

Ensure that the remote access server is able to connect to a DHCP server that has a scope for its subnet
Authorize the remote access server to receive multiple addresses from a DHCP server
None of above
Configure the remote access server with the address of a DHCP server
Configure the remote access server to act as a DHCP Relay Agent

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Windows 2000 Server
You install Terminal Services on a Windows 2000 domain controller. You install Terminal Services Client on users' client computers. Users report that when they try to connect to the Terminal server, they receive the following error message: "The local policy of this system does not allow you to logon interactively." When you attempt to log on to the Terminal server as an administrator from a user's computer, you log on successfully. You want users to be able to log on to the Terminal server. What should you do?

Grant the users the right to log on as a service
Copy the users' prpfiles to the Terminal server
Grant the users the right to log on locally
Copy the users' home folders to the Terminal server
Grant the users the right to log on over the network

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Windows 2000 Server
Computer accounts and user accounts in your domain have been seperated into OUs for administrative purpose. You want to require strong passwords for the local user accounts only. What should you do?

Set a Group Policy on each local computer to enable the passwords must meet complexity requirements policy
None of above
Set a Group Policy on all OUs containing computer accounts to enable the passwords must meet complexity requirements policy
Set a Group Policy on all OUs containing user accounts to enable the passwords must meet complexity requirements policy
Set a Group Policy on the domain to enable the passwords must meet complexity requirements policy

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