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?

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

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

Right click on application executable, select properties and select assign 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
None of above.
Open Task Manager, chose Performance, chose view all processors, assign processes to appropriate processor

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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 Domain Administrator Group
Add the applications service accounts to the Local Administrator Group. Use the Restricted Groups option in an OU 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 Local Administrator Group. Use the Restricted Groups option in a Domain Group Policy

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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?

Set the router option in the DHCP Scopes to 192.168.2.1 for Engineeringl and 192.168.1.1 for Salesl
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
None of above
Configure Engineering2 and Sales2 as DHCP servers without any scopes

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Windows 2000 Server
You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 Server network that runs in mixed mode. You install a new Windows 2000 Server computer. You create and share a new HP LaserJet 4L printer. Your Windows 2000 Professional client computers can print to the new printer successfully. However, when users try to connect to the printer from Windows NT Workstation 4.0 client computers, they receive the dialog box shown in the exhibit. "The server on which the printer resides does not have a suitable HP LaserJet printer driver installed". You want the printer driver to be installed automatically on the Windows NT Workstation computers. What should you do?

Copy the Windows NT 4.0 printer drivers to the WinntSystem32 pri liter sdri vers folder on the Windows 2000 print server
None of above
Copy the Windows NT 4.0 Printer Drivers to the Net logon shared folders on all Windows NT Server 4.0 computers still configured as BDCs
Copy the Windows NT 4.0 printer drivers to the Net logon shared folder on the PDC emulator
Change the sharing options on the printer to install additional drivers for Windows NT 4.0 or Windows 2000

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Windows 2000 Server
You are the network administrator for your company. Mike Nash is a member of the Administration group, and Nate Sun is a member of the Intern group. Both groups are in the same domain. On the intranet server, the Administration group is placed in the Security group, and the Intern group is placed in the Nonsecurity group. The Security group is then granted Full Control permission for the Sales virtual directory. Nate needs to update new sales information that is located on the Sales virtual directory. What should you do so that Nate can perform this task?

Remove Nate fmm the Intern group
Enable Anonymous access for the Sales virtual directory
Enable Anonymous access for the intranet server
Make Nate a member of the Security group
None of above

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