Home > Archive > 70-217 > March 2002 > Mon 70-217 Question of the Day





You are viewing an archived Text-only version of the thread. To view this thread in it's original format and/or if you want to reply to this thread please [click here]

Author Mon 70-217 Question of the Day
wbafrank

2002-03-25, 6:58 am

And today's poser is ....

Q40. You are working at a large and aggressive technology company. Your company is aware that their competition is trying to steal ideas and concepts. You are concerned that they will attempt to use these concepts as their own. While discussing these issues at a corporate meeting, it has been decided that there needs to be stricter security policies in place, with the primary goal of having the tightest security possible, while still having a functional network. The task of structuring the new policies has been given to you. You have decided to use one of the four predefined security templates included in Windows 2000. The corporate network is a mixed environment running 3 NT 4.0 domains, each with 50 clients (running NT 4.0 Workstation), and one Windows 2000 domain divided into 2 sites. The network is running 100BaseT for the LAN segments, and is running fractional T1 for the WAN segments. You selected HISEC*.INF as your template, and now some users are having problems using the network. What happened that caused this difficulty?

A. HISEC*.INF is only used in pure NT 4.0 environments. Since you have Windows 2000 computers, they will not be able to access some resources after the template has been used.

B. HISEC*.INF has difficulty with the format of the packets used on a fractional T1 line. Upgrade to a full T1, or ATM and the access problems will be cleared.

C. HISEC*.INF is only to be used in pure Windows 2000 environments. Since you have NT 4.0 computers, they will not be able to access some resources after the template has been used.

D. HISEC*.INF does not allow access to the NT 4.0 Power Users group. Move users from that group to another newly created Global NT 4.0 group.

Good Luck - see you tomorrow for the answer!!
unreal

2002-03-25, 8:52 am

My pick:

C. HISEC*.INF is only to be used in pure Windows 2000 environments. Since you have NT 4.0 computers, they will not be able to access some resources after the template has been used.
jeff_j_black

2002-03-25, 9:54 am

'C'
CyberDude

2002-03-25, 1:42 pm

C, and you also have to remember that if you are running a program on a 2K computer that used to be able to run on NT, then that program will also not be functional.
robertmillar

2002-03-25, 2:31 pm

C
KScheler

2002-03-25, 2:47 pm

C. Hisec*.inf is for "pure" w2k networks.
wbafrank

2002-03-26, 12:14 pm

quote:
Originally posted by wbafrank
And today's poser is ....

Q40. You are working at a large and aggressive technology company. Your company is aware that their competition is trying to steal ideas and concepts. You are concerned that they will attempt to use these concepts as their own. While discussing these issues at a corporate meeting, it has been decided that there needs to be stricter security policies in place, with the primary goal of having the tightest security possible, while still having a functional network. The task of structuring the new policies has been given to you. You have decided to use one of the four predefined security templates included in Windows 2000. The corporate network is a mixed environment running 3 NT 4.0 domains, each with 50 clients (running NT 4.0 Workstation), and one Windows 2000 domain divided into 2 sites. The network is running 100BaseT for the LAN segments, and is running fractional T1 for the WAN segments. You selected HISEC*.INF as your template, and now some users are having problems using the network. What happened that caused this difficulty?

A. HISEC*.INF is only used in pure NT 4.0 environments. Since you have Windows 2000 computers, they will not be able to access some resources after the template has been used.
B. HISEC*.INF has difficulty with the format of the packets used on a fractional T1 line. Upgrade to a full T1, or ATM and the access problems will be cleared.
C. HISEC*.INF is only to be used in pure Windows 2000 environments. Since you have NT 4.0 computers, they will not be able to access some resources after the template has been used.
D. HISEC*.INF does not allow access to the NT 4.0 Power Users group. Move users from that group to another newly created Global NT 4.0 group.

Good Luck - see you tomorrow for the answer!!



And the answer is:

Correct Answers: C

By using the Highly Secure template, you have secured the network to such an extent that your Windows NT 4.0 clients cannot communicate with your Windows 2000. You should only use HISEC*.INF when you are sure that the network is designed as only Windows 2000.
Sponsored Links





Free Braindumps | MCSE braindumps software forum

Copyright 2003 - 2008 examnotes.net