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Author 4 W2k Pro Q's and Answers presented for judge
adam salam

2003-02-05, 2:03 am

Hello
I like to share a number of 8 Q’s with you, and to keep you from any influence I well provide the answers which I found with these Q’s after you apply your attempts, the answers seems to be not correct for me, so lets see your answers first:
These are the first 4 Q’s:


1) You recently installed Windows 2000 Professional on a Pentium III computer that’s not connected to an intranet, one week later; you want to apply service pack. What should you do?

a. Type update
b. Type update –s:distribution_folder
c. Type update /syspart
d. Type update/cmdcons

-------------------------------

2) You are the administrator of your company’s network. You add two user accounts, Nadia and Jean, to a computer running windows 2000 professional that several users share. When Nadia attempts to logon, an error message appears stating, [b]“The system is unable to copy \Documents and settings\All users to \Documents and settings\Nadia. DETAIL – Access is denied.”
What should you do to allow Nadia to log on?

a. Copy the all users profile to the default user profile.
b. Copy the default user profile to the All users profile.
c. Reset the permissions on the \Documents and settings\All users profile.
d. Reset the permissions on the \Documents and settings\Default user profile.

------------------------

3) You acquire a Pentium III computer running windows 2000 Professional. You connect a digital camera to one of the USB ports on the computer, but Windows doesn’t install the device. What’s the must likely cause?

a. USB support is disabled in the bios.
b. USB support is disabled in Windows.
c. USB port is physically damaged.
d. The device is not supported by windows 2000. You might be able to obtain an updated driver from the device manufacturer.

--------------------------------


4) You recently installed Windows 2000 Professional on a Pentium III computer. You open the Power options program in the Control panel, but no APM tab is displayed, which conditions are must likely to cause the absence of the APM tab from the power options properties dialog box?

a. APM is disabled on the bios.
b. The computer doesn’t have an APM-based bios/
c. The computer has ACPI-compliant system board.
d. The computer doesn’t have a smart uninterruptible power supply UPS connected to the serial port.
adam salam

2003-02-05, 4:35 am

Hello

are there anyone!!! where are you
babu75

2003-02-05, 8:44 am

1 b
2 b
3 a
4 b&c( no APM & if ACPI is installed)

that would be my best guess!!!!
adam salam

2003-02-05, 9:53 am

quote:
Originally posted by babu75
1 b
2 b
3 a
4 b&c( no APM & if ACPI is installed)

that would be my best guess!!!!




good attempt, wating for other guys
dvaughn78

2003-02-05, 11:06 am

b
c
a
c
dvaughn78

2003-02-05, 11:06 am

b
c
a
c
adam salam

2003-02-05, 11:26 am

quote:
Originally posted by dvaughn78
b
c
a
c



LOL.. double
JayDot

2003-02-05, 11:26 am

B
C
A
A
soccer4net

2003-02-05, 11:49 am

most definitely
A
C
A
C(could be A if there was more information in the question that indicated it or was multi answer ?)
I can explain why if you want.
adam salam

2003-02-05, 11:54 am

quote:
Originally posted by soccer4net
most definitely
A
C
A
C(could be A if there was more information in the question that indicated it or was multi answer ?)
I can explain why if you want.



4) You recently installed Windows 2000 Professional on a Pentium III computer. You open the Power options program in the Control panel, but no APM tab is displayed, which conditions are must likely to cause the absence of the APM tab from the power options properties dialog box?(Choose two)

a. APM is disabled on the bios.
b. The computer doesn’t have an APM-based bios/
c. The computer has ACPI-compliant system board.
d. The computer doesn’t have a smart uninterruptible power supply UPS connected to the serial port.
soccer4net

2003-02-05, 2:19 pm

There you go, then they probably want A,C.
If B is one of them then its a pretty bogus question, if you get a question on this they'll tell you if its an apm bios or not(why would you be looking for it if you didn't have apm?)
adam salam

2003-02-05, 2:32 pm

Lets hear from other guys and after that I will providing you with the answers that came from MS with the quetions.
christo78

2003-02-05, 8:35 pm

I think it would be:
1.B
2.C
3.A
4. A & C
adam salam

2003-02-06, 2:18 am

quote:
Originally posted by christo78
I think it would be:
1.B
2.C
3.A
4. A & C




keep going.....lets see other guys
adam salam

2003-02-06, 4:47 am

quote:
Originally posted by adam salam
Hello
I like to share a number of 8 Q’s with you, and to keep you from any influence I well provide the answers which I found with these Q’s after you apply your attempts, the answers seems to be not correct for me, so lets see your answers first:
These are the first 4 Q’s:


1) You recently installed Windows 2000 Professional on a Pentium III computer that’s not connected to an intranet, one week later; you want to apply service pack. What should you do?

a. Type update
b. Type update –s:distribution_folder
c. Type update /syspart
d. Type update/cmdcons

-------------------------------

2) You are the administrator of your company’s network. You add two user accounts, Nadia and Jean, to a computer running windows 2000 professional that several users share. When Nadia attempts to logon, an error message appears stating, [b]“The system is unable to copy \Documents and settings\All users to \Documents and settings\Nadia. DETAIL – Access is denied.”
What should you do to allow Nadia to log on?

a. Copy the all users profile to the default user profile.
b. Copy the default user profile to the All users profile.
c. Reset the permissions on the \Documents and settings\All users profile.
d. Reset the permissions on the \Documents and settings\Default user profile.

------------------------

3) You acquire a Pentium III computer running windows 2000 Professional. You connect a digital camera to one of the USB ports on the computer, but Windows doesn’t install the device. What’s the must likely cause?

a. USB support is disabled in the bios.
b. USB support is disabled in Windows.
c. USB port is physically damaged.
d. The device is not supported by windows 2000. You might be able to obtain an updated driver from the device manufacturer.

--------------------------------


4) You recently installed Windows 2000 Professional on a Pentium III computer. You open the Power options program in the Control panel, but no APM tab is displayed, which conditions are must likely to cause the absence of the APM tab from the power options properties dialog box?

a. APM is disabled on the bios.
b. The computer doesn’t have an APM-based bios/
c. The computer has ACPI-compliant system board.
d. The computer doesn’t have a smart uninterruptible power supply UPS connected to the serial port.




-----------------------
The answers provided by MS readiness exam are:

1) a. Type update

2) d. Reset the permissions on the \Documents and settings\Default user profile.

3) a. USB support is disabled in the bios.

4) b. The computer doesn’t have an APM-based bios.
c. The computer has ACPI-compliant system board.

------------------

I have some notes here, like the first Q: where can I use "Update", so to apply service pack, is the command line support such command?

the second Q also, some thing not cleare, you usually don't reset permissions for a user to log on and load his or her profile that normally happin automatically, yes you can reset the permissions but you doing that to change defaults.

The third Q could be any one of the answers, so it's not clear.

the last Q couldn't it be APM is disabled on the bios?
F150

2003-02-06, 11:26 am

Adam,

I just wanted to comment on Q #4. According to some of the things I have read. Windows 2000 will still install APM even though APM is disabled in the BIOS as long as the computer is APM compliant. However you may have issues with the computer shutting down or going into or out of sleep mode if the APM is enabled in windows and disabled in the BIOS.

Since this question asked what will prevent Win 2000 from installing APM I would have to agree with there answer. Even though they give 2 answers it still the same thing stopping the APM from installing (a non-APM compliant computer).

Interesting Q's
soccer4net

2003-02-06, 1:26 pm

Ok,
1. SPs have an exe file called 'update' so thats what you would type from the SP folder to start the setup program, since you just want to update the local computer.

2. The all user/default user profiles are copied to make a new user profile when someone logs in, so if someone had changed the permissions, so that the new user had no access, then you would get an error. You need to reset permissions as in put them back to the default. I don't remeber why or if it tells you all users when it really means the default one, but check technet.

3. If there's no other special info always go with the bios answer with usb.

4. Now that F1 mentions it I think I do rember something about APM still being installed when its disabled in the bios, so yeah I guess that's possible however, don't let it fool you, if the apm doesn't work the bios can be the issue. There are even technet articles that list it as a primary suspect.
sgirardo

2003-02-06, 2:52 pm

Adam,
I guess you do not have the Readiness Review book, because they do explain the answers.
Where did you get these questions?

I checked the errata, none of these where on there.
http://support.microsoft.com/defaul...ben-us%3b291581

Also found sample chapter, which has question #1:
http://www.microsoft.com/mspress/bo...pchap/2538a.asp

Regarding question four, I guess W2K would select "neutral system" when APM is present but disabled in the BIOS.

http://www.microsoft.com/technet/tr...rt3/proch20.asp
Advanced Power Management Support
Advanced Power Management (APM) is the previous version power management solution that was introduced in Windows 95. ACPI supercedes APM. While Microsoft strongly recommends using systems with an ACPI-capable BIOS, Microsoft recognizes that many computers only support APM

Windows 2000 Professional has limited support for APM, and that support is intended only for older portable computers. It is not designed for use on desktop computers or other computers that do not use batteries for system power.

Microsoft places portable computers in one of three categories based on the support for APM offered by the systems. Windows 2000 Professional recognizes the following categories:

AutoEnable APM During installation of the operating system, Windows 2000 Professional Setup automatically installs and enables APM on systems in this category, and the APM tab is present when you open Power Options in Control Panel.

Disable APM Microsoft has determined through testing that APM does not work properly on systems in this category. During installation of the operating system, Windows 2000 Professional Setup does not install APM. The APM tab is not present in Power Options.

Neutral Systems The APM functionality of systems in this category has not been determined. During installation of the operating system, Windows 2000 Professional Setup installs APM, but does not enable it. You can manually enable APM support on the APM tab of Power Options in Control Panel.

For more information about APM, see "Mobile Computing" in this book. For more information about APM and ACPI BIOS detection, see the Microsoft Knowledge Base link on the Web Resources page at http://www.microsoft.com/windows200...es/default.asp. Search for the articles "Windows 2000 and Advanced Power Management (APM) Support" and "How Windows 2000 Determines ACPI Compatibility."
adam salam

2003-02-06, 3:36 pm

quote:
Originally posted by sgirardo
Adam,
I guess you do not have the Readiness Review book, because they do explain the answers.
Where did you get these questions?



It's not a book it's MS Readiness review (r)2000 Microsoft

and I didn't find any explanation

here is the program interface:
adam salam

2003-02-06, 3:47 pm

quote:
Originally posted by sgirardo

I checked the errata, none of these where on there.
http://support.microsoft.com/defaul...ben-us%3b291581

Also found sample chapter, which has question #1:
http://www.microsoft.com/mspress/bo...pchap/2538a.asp

Regarding question four, I guess W2K would select "neutral system" when APM is present but disabled in the BIOS.

http://www.microsoft.com/technet/tr...rt3/proch20.asp
Advanced Power Management Support
Advanced Power Management (APM) is the previous version power management solution that was introduced in Windows 95. ACPI supercedes APM. While Microsoft strongly recommends using systems with an ACPI-capable BIOS, Microsoft recognizes that many computers only support APM

Windows 2000 Professional has limited support for APM, and that support is intended only for older portable computers. It is not designed for use on desktop computers or other computers that do not use batteries for system power.

Microsoft places portable computers in one of three categories based on the support for APM offered by the systems. Windows 2000 Professional recognizes the following categories:

AutoEnable APM During installation of the operating system, Windows 2000 Professional Setup automatically installs and enables APM on systems in this category, and the APM tab is present when you open Power Options in Control Panel.

Disable APM Microsoft has determined through testing that APM does not work properly on systems in this category. During installation of the operating system, Windows 2000 Professional Setup does not install APM. The APM tab is not present in Power Options.

Neutral Systems The APM functionality of systems in this category has not been determined. During installation of the operating system, Windows 2000 Professional Setup installs APM, but does not enable it. You can manually enable APM support on the APM tab of Power Options in Control Panel.

For more information about APM, see "Mobile Computing" in this book. For more information about APM and ACPI BIOS detection, see the Microsoft Knowledge Base link on the Web Resources page at http://www.microsoft.com/windows200...es/default.asp. Search for the articles "Windows 2000 and Advanced Power Management (APM) Support" and "How Windows 2000 Determines ACPI Compatibility."



the information you provided here is great , thak you, I should follow the links you provided cause I always confused b/w APM and ACPI
sgirardo

2003-02-06, 3:48 pm

Adam,

It's a book also, the second link I posted has a complete sample chapter with answers and explanations.
I am surpised they left out explanations out of the software version.

Steve
adam salam

2003-02-07, 1:49 am

For Q #1 I have found a good explanation in the links provided by sgirardo:

1.4 Deploy service packs.
Microsoft uses service packs to distribute numerous updates and hot fixes to an operating system. You can locate service packs for Microsoft operating systems on the Windows Update Web site, a centralized, online resource for Windows updates, including service packs, hot fixes, and drivers.
A shortcut to the Windows Update Web site is located near the top of the Start menu unless group policy restrictions remove it. This shortcut points to the Windows Update program UPDMGR.EXE, located in %systemroot%\system32. Running this program starts Microsoft Internet Explorer and connects to the Windows Update Web site. This Web site uses Active Setup and Microsoft ActiveX controls to provide product enhancements. These controls are downloaded and installed on the computer the first time you establish a connection with the site. Windows Update automatically compares device drivers installed on the computer with a database of updated drivers on the server. Any newer drivers than those currently installed are offered for installation.

In a medium to large network, distributing updates locally from the intranet is more efficient than updates applied externally from the Internet. To prevent users from accessing Windows Update, configure the Windows 2000 group policy setting: disable and remove links to Windows Update to restrict access to the Windows Update site.

You apply local updates using service packs. For earlier versions of Windows 32-bit operating systems, like Windows NT, you must reapply a service pack every time you install operating system components from the operating system’s installation CD-ROM or a distribution point. A distribution point is a network share containing the operating system source files. A distribution point is synonymous with a distribution share.

In Windows 2000 Professional, slipstreaming avoids the administrative overhead of service pack reapplication. Slipstreaming allows you to apply a service pack update to the source files in the Windows 2000 Professional distribution point. When the distribution point is the source for an installation of Windows 2000 Professional, the new installation contains the service pack. Any services or drivers added to the local installation come from the distribution point, thus avoiding the need to reapply the service pack.

You complete a manual, local installation of a service pack by running the service pack UPDATE.EXE utility. If, after applying the service pack, you add any services or drivers to the local installation, you must reapply the service pack. To avoid manual service pack reapplication, type update /slip to slipstream a distribution point. Then use the distribution point rather than the Windows 2000 Professional installation CD-ROM to add services or drivers to the local installation.

MCS

70-210.01.04.001

A

You install Windows 2000 Professional on a new Pentium III computer that is not connected to an intranet. One week later, you want to apply a service pack. What should you do?

A. Type update.

Correct:

A. To apply a service pack to an existing installation of Windows 2000, acquire the service pack from Microsoft via CD-ROM or by downloading from their Internet site, and then type update to run UPDATE.EXE. If new services or drivers are installed, reapply the service pack. Alternatively, you can visit the Windows Update site so that new updates are applied automatically.

B. Type update /slip.

Incorrect:

B. When you type update /slip, the command updates a central distribution point of Windows 2000 source files. This distribution point is then used to update a Windows 2000 Professional computer with the latest service pack. Because the computer described in the question is not connected to an intranet, a central distribution point is not available.

C. Type update /syspart.

Incorrect:

C. /syspart is a valid Windows 2000 setup switch used to complete the setup loader and text-mode phases of installation on a fixed disk. The disk is then moved to another computer to continue installation. This switch is not valid for the service pack update program, UPDATE.EXE.

D. Type update /cmdcons.

Incorrect:

D. /cmdcons is a valid switch for the 32-bit Windows 2000 setup routine, which is used to create a recovery command console startup option for Windows 2000. This switch is not valid for the service pack update program, UPDATE.EXE.
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