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 Task Manager to end any related child processes
None of above
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
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
None of above.
Right click on application process in Task Manager, select Set Affinity, and select the appropriate processor
Open Task Manager, chose Performance, chose view all processors, assign processes to appropriate processor

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Windows 2000 Server
You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 Server computer named Intra. Intra is a member of an Active Directory domain and hosts an Intranet Web-Ske for your company. Company policy requires that only authenticated users have access to the intranet site. All company users have a user account in the Active Directory domain. You configure directory security for the Web Site to use integrated security. However, you discover that users can access the Web Site without authentication. You need to ensure that only authenticated users can access the web site. What should you do?

Install Active Directory on the server
Clear the Allow Anonymous Connection check box
Select Basic Authentication check box
Disable the IUSE_inta user account on Intra
Clear the Allow IIS to Control Password check box

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Windows 2000 Server
You have configured a Group Policy Object (GPO) for the marketing oranization unit (OU) to prevent users from accessing My Network Places and from running System in Control Panel. You want the Managers Domain Local Group to be able to access My Network Places, but you still want to prevent them from running System in Control Panel. What should you do?

Add the Managers group to the access control list of the GPO. Deny the permission of the managers group to read and apply the Group Policy
Add the Managers group to the access control list of the GPO. Disable the permission of the managers group to read and apply the Group Policy
Create a second GPO in the OU. Add the Managers group to the access control list. Allow the managers group to apply the Group Policy. Deny the Authenticated Users group permission to read and apply th
Create a second GPO in the OU. Add the Managers group to the access control list. Allow the managers group to apply the Group Policy. Disable the Authenticated Users group permission to read and apply
None of above

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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
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
Copy the users' prpfiles to the Terminal server

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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?

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

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