Windows 2000 Server
You install and run a third-party 32-bit application named Application on your Windows 2000 Server computer. After several days, the application stops responding. You open Task Manager and find that the CPU usage is at 100 percent. The normal range of CPU usage on the server is from 20 percent to 30 percent You end the application. However, you see that the CPU on the server is still at 100 percent. Task Manager shows no other applications running. You then examine the Processes page in Task Manager and confirm that the Application.exe process is no longer running. You want to return the CPU usage to its normal range. What should you do?

None of above
Use Task Manager to end any related child processes
Use Computer Management to stop and restart the Workstation service
Use Task Manager to end and automatically restart the Explorer.exe process
Use Computer Management to stop and restart the Server service

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Windows 2000 Server
You enable the Routing and Remote Access Service (RRAS) on a computer running Windows 2000 Server. You configure the computer as a RAS server. You want to provide mutual authentication between the RAS server and RAS clients. You also want to ensure that data passing between the RAS server and RAS clients is encrypted. Which authentication method should you use for your incoming connections to support mutual authentication and data encryption?

None of above
PAP
CHAP
MS-CHAP v2
SPAP

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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?

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

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Windows 2000 Server
You want to improve the TCP transmission speed of a Windows 2000 Server computer. You also want to remove an unused registry key. You use Regedit32 to edit the registry of the Windows 2000 Server. You insert a value in the registry named TCPWindowSize, and you remove the unused key. You restart the computer, but the computer stops responding before the logon screen appears. You want to return the computer to its previous configuration. What should you do?

Restart the computer by using the Recovery Console. Run the Fixboot c: command, and then run the Exit command
Restart the computer by using the last known good configuration
Restart the computer by using the Recovery Console. Run the enable winlogon service_auto_start command, and then run the Exit command
None of above
Restart the computer in safe mode. Then restart the computer again

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Windows 2000 Server
Your network uses TCP/IP as the only network protocol. Devices on the network are configured to use IP address from the private 10.0.0.0 range. All the client computers on the network runs Windows 2000 Professional. The network includes Windows 2000 Server computers and UNIX servers. User's print jobs are sent to shared printers on a Windows 2000 Server computer named PrintServ that directs the print jobs to print devices attached directly to the network. You have a high-capacity print device that is attached to one of the UNIX servers. The UNIX computer uses the LPR printing protocol, and it's IP address is 10.1.1.99. The name of the printer queue is GIANT. You want users to be able to connect to this printer from their computers. What should you do?

Create a local printer on PrintServ. Create a new TCP/IP port for an LPR server at address 10.1.1.99 with a queue name of GIANT. Share this printer and connect to it from users' computers
None of above
Install Microsoft Print Services for Unix on PrintServ. Create a network printer on users' computers, and specify that the printer URL is LPR://10.1.1.99/ GIANT
Create a network printer on PrintServ, and specify that the printer name is \16.1.1.99GIANT. Share this printer and connect to it from users computers
Install Microsoft Print Services for Unix on users* Computers. Create a network printer, and specify that the printer name is \10.1.1.99GIANT

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Windows 2000 Server
You want to provide Internet access for the clients on your network. You decide to use Network Address Translation (NAT). You have a Windows 2000 computer you try to establish a secure Virtual Private Networking session with. You try connecting to the Remote Windows 2000 computer using L2TP. You are unable to establish a connection with the remote node using L2TP. You are able to make a connection with another computer in your same office. Why are you unable to make a connection.to the remote location?

You can not establish a L2TP connection behind a computer running NAT. The L2TP session fails because the IP Security packets become corrupted
None of above
L2TP does not work with Windows 2000 computers
NAT does not allow for remote networking
You have not configured the NAT server to translate the IP Security packets

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