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Home > Archive > 70-218 > May 2003 > 70-218 Q of the Day 5/29
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70-218 Q of the Day 5/29
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| mrfixit 2003-05-29, 6:12 am |
| And todays question is....
You are an administrator for several Windows 2000 servers. Purchasing has come to you and asked that you provide the hardware (memory, CPU, and disk size) requirements to support a client computer using Terminal Services for Windows 2000 Server. What are the minimum requirements for a client computer to use Terminal Services?
A)A Windows for Workgroups (Windows 3.11) client computer with 16MB of memory, a 386 processor, and a network card
B)A Windows 95/98 client computer with 32MB of memory, a 486 processor, and a network card
C)A Windows NT 3.51 client computer with 24MB of memory, a Pentium Pro processor, and a network card
D)A Windows for Workgroups (Windows 3.11) client computer with 32MB of memory, a 386 processor, and a network card
See you tomorrow! Good luck!  | |
| Deja-vue 2003-05-29, 9:12 am |
| b | |
| B4yaman3 2003-05-29, 10:03 am |
| The Answer is B! | |
| enforcer 2003-05-29, 10:18 am |
| Actually it will run on a 386, although it is not recommended therefore my answer is
A. | |
| me? I dunno... 2003-05-29, 12:57 pm |
| I have been mulling it over and I think that either the one on the left, or the one on the right would be the correct answer.
In a scenario like this there is really no wrong answer, as such, I will choose both 'A', and 'B'. | |
| mrfixit 2003-05-30, 6:35 am |
| And the answer is....
You are an administrator for several Windows 2000 servers. Purchasing has come to you and asked that you provide the hardware (memory, CPU, and disk size) requirements to support a client computer using Terminal Services for Windows 2000 Server. What are the minimum requirements for a client computer to use Terminal Services?
A)A Windows for Workgroups (Windows 3.11) client computer with 16MB of memory, a 386 processor, and a network card
A terminal service is a session hosting service that enables a Windows 2000 server to provide environment resources (memory, processor, hard drive), whereas a client computer provides only minimal memory and processor resources. The end result is that a client computer as "thin" as a Windows for Workgroups (Windows 3.11) client computer with 16MB of memory, a 386 processor, and a network card can emulate a Windows 2000 environment with little loss of performance over a Pentium machine with 64MB of RAM running the same applications.
Got a few of you!  |
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