Q1. - (Topic 3)
You are evaluating the purchase a notebook computer that has the following hardware:
1.6-gigahertz (GHz) 32-bit processor
1024-MB RAM
1 video card that uses shared memory
4-GB solid state drive
You need to ensure that you can install Windows 7 Enterprise on the notebook computer.
Which hardware component should you change?
A. hard disk
B. processor
C. RAM
D. video card
Answer: A
Explanation:
Hard Disk does not meet the minimum requirements.4-GB solid state drive!= 40-GB hard disk drive (traditional or SSD) with at least 15 GB of available spaceRequirements:Windows 7 Home Premium, Professional, Ultimate, and Enterprise editions have the following minimum hardware requirements:
-1 GHz 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x64) processor- 1 GB of system memory- A 40-GB hard disk drive (traditional or SSD) with at least 15 GB of available space- A graphics adapter that supports DirectX 9 graphics, has a Windows Display Driver Model (WDDM) driver,- Pixel Shader 2.0 hardware, and 32 bits per pixel and a minimum of 128 MB graphics
Q2. - (Topic 3)
You have a computer named Computer1 that runs Windows 7 and Windows Internet Explorer 8.
A user reports that Computer1 has a number of Internet Explorer configuration issues that cause instability when browsing the Internet.
You need to configure Internet Explorer to use all default settings.
What should you do from Internet Options?
A. From the Advanced tab, click Reset.
B. From the Programs tab, click Set programs.
C. From the Advanced tab, click Restore advanced settings.
D. From the Security tab, click Reset all zones to default level.
Answer: A
Explanation:
Reset Internet Explorer settings By resetting Internet Explorer settings, you return Internet Explorer to the state it was in when it was first installed on your computer. This is useful for troubleshooting problems that might be caused by settings that were changed after installation. When you delete personal settings, some webpages that rely on previously stored cookies, form data, passwords, or previously installed browser add-ons might not work correctly. Resetting Internet Explorer to its default settings does not delete your favorites, feeds, Web Slices, and a few other personalized settings. See the table below for a complete list of all settings and information about whether they are reset or maintained. Resetting Internet Explorer's settings is not reversible. After a reset, all previous settings are lost and cannot be recovered. Rather than resetting everything, you might want to reset specific settings or delete your webpage history. For more information, see the links at the bottom of this topic.
To reset Internet Explorer settings
1. Close any Internet Explorer or Windows Explorer windows that are currently open.
2. Click to open Internet Explorer.
3. Click the Tools button, and then click Internet Options.
4. Click the Advanced tab, and then click Reset.
5. Select the Delete personal settings check box if you would like to remove browsing history, search providers, Accelerators, home pages, and InPrivate Filtering data.
6. In the Reset Internet Explorer Settings dialog box, click Reset.
7. When Internet Explorer finishes restoring the settings, click Close, and then click OK.
8. Close Internet Explorer.
Your changes will take effect the next time you open Internet Explorer.
Q3. - (Topic 2)
A user telephones your help desk. Her Favorites list is corrupt and she is having problems accessing the Web sites she visits regularly. All the computers in your organization are backed up every night with a file and folder backup that uses default settings. A restore point was created on all the company's client computers 24 hours ago because a new device driver was installed. You performed a System Image backup on all the computers in your organization three weeks ago. The user is not computer-literate and you need to fix the problem for her.
What is the most efficient way to do so?
A. Perform a system restore.
B. Perform a System Image restore.
C. Use the Restore Files Wizard to restore the Favorites folder in the user's backed-up profile.
D. Access the History tab under Favorites on the user's browser. Browse to recently visited sites and add them to Favorites.
Answer: C
Q4. - (Topic 4)
Your company network includes a Windows Server 2008 R2 server named Server1 and client computers that have Windows 7 installed. All computers arm members of an Active Directory domain. You use a computer named Client1.
You plan to collect events from Client1 on Server1 by using HTTPS. On Server 1, you start and configure the Windows Event Collector service. On Client1, you start the Windows Remote Management service.
You discover that no events are being collected.
You need to ensure that events are forwarded from Client1 to Server1.
What should you do?
A. On Client1, create an outbound Rule to allow port 443 for the Domain connection type.
B. On Server1, create a Windows Event Collector firewall exception for the Domain connection type.
C. On Client1, create an inbound Rule to allow port 5986 for the Domain connection type.
D. On Client1, create a Windows Remote Management firewall exception for the Public connection type.
Answer: C
Q5. - (Topic 4)
YOU need to identify the hardware failures have occurred on your computer in the past six months.
What should you do?
A. From the Control Panel, open Troubleshooting.
B. From the Control Panel, open Performance Information and Tools.
C. From the Action Center, open Recovery.
D. From the Action Center, under Maintenance, click View reliability history.
Answer: D
Q6. - (Topic 1)
Your network has a main office and a branch office. The branch office has computers that run Windows 7. A network administrator enables BranchCache in the main office. You run Netsh on your computer as shown in the exhibit. (Click the Exhibit button.)
You need to ensure that other computers in the branch office can access the cached content on your computer.
What should you do?
A. Turn on Internet Information Services (IIS).
B. Configure the computer as a hosted cache client.
C. Configure the BranchCache service to start automatically.
D. Modify the Windows Firewall with Advanced Security rules.
Answer: D
Explanation:
Distributed Cache Mode Distributed Cache mode uses peer caching to host the branch office cache among clients running Windows 7 on the branch office network. This means that each Distributed Cache mode client hosts part of the cache, but no single client hosts all the cache. When a client running Windows 7 retrieves content over the WAN, it places that content into its own cache. If another BranchCache client running Windows 7 attempts to access the same content, it is able to access that content directly from the first client rather than having to retrieve it over the WAN link. When it accesses the file from its peer, it also copies that file into its own cache. When you configure BranchCache in distributed cache mode, BranchCache client computers use the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) for data transfer with other client computers. BranchCache client computers also use the Web Services Dynamic Discovery (WS-Discovery) protocol when they attempt to discover content on client cache servers. You can use this procedure to configure client firewall exceptions to allow incoming HTTP and WS-Discovery traffic on client computers that are configured for distributed cache mode. You must select Allow the connection for the BranchCache client to be able to send traffic on this port.
Q7. - (Topic 2)
Your computer running Windows 7 Enterprise has two internal hard disks.
System protection is configured by default on the C: drive, which holds the operating system and installed applications.
The D: drive is a 500-GB hard disk formatted with the NTFS filing system, and you use it to store your personal files.
You want to store previous versions going back several months and therefore intend to reserve 200 GB of this disk for system protection.
You are not using either of your internal disks for backup; instead, you store your backups on a 1-TB external USB hard disk.
How do you configure system protection on your D: drive? (Choose all that apply; each answer forms part of the complete solution.)
A. Select Restore System Settings And Previous Versions Of Files
B. Select Only Restore Previous Versions Of Files
C. Set the Max Usage slider control to 40 percent
D. Set the Max Usage slider control to 4 percent
Answer: B,C
Q8. - (Topic 1)
You have a computer that runs Windows Vista Service Pack 2 (SP2).
You need to upgrade the computer to Windows 7.
What should you do?
A. Start the computer from the Windows 7 installation media and select the Upgrade option.
B. Start the computer from the Windows 7 installation media and select the Custom (advanced) option.
C. From Windows Vista, run Setup.exe from the Windows 7 installation media and select the Upgrade option.
D. From Windows Vista, run Setup.exe from the Windows 7 installation media and select the Custom (advanced) option.
Answer: C
Explanation:
Upgrading Windows Vista to Windows 7 instructionsAccess the Windows 7 installation source and double-click Setup.exe. When prompted by User Account Control, click Allow. This loads the Install Windows page. Click Install Now.Other NotesYou can upgrade computers running Windows Vista to Windows 7. When you upgrade from Windows Vista to Windows 7, all documents, settings, applications, and user accounts that existed on the computer running Windows Vista are available when the upgrade is finished. The advantage to an upgrade is that it allows you to keep the current application configuration. When you perform a migration, you need to reinstall the user's applications on the new computer. As mentioned previously, this can be problematic in organizations that are not careful about keeping track of which specific set of applications are installed on each user's computer. Prior to attempting to perform the upgrade from Windows Vista to Windows 7, you should run the Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor. The Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor is an application that you can download from Microsoft's Web site that will inform you if Windows 7 supports a computer running the current hardware and software configuration of Windows Vista. Prior to running the Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor, you should ensure that all hardware that you want to use with Windows 7, such as printers, scanners, and cameras, are connected to the computer. The Upgrade Advisor generates a report that informs you of which applications and devices are known to have problems with Windows
7. A similar compatibility report is generated during the upgrade process, but the version created by the Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor is more likely to be up to date.
Q9. - (Topic 2)
A user named User1 uses a shared computer that runs Windows 7. User1 is a member of group named
Group1. The computer contains a folder named Folder1. The permissions for User1 are shown in the User1 Permissions exhibit. (Click the Exhibit button.)
The permissions for Group1 are shown in the Group1 Permissions exhibit. (Click the Exhibit button.)
You need to ensure that User1 can create files in Folder1. All other members of Group1 must be prevented from creating files in Folder1. What should you do?
A. On Folder1, assign the Full control permission to User1.
B. On Folder1, remove the Deny - Write permission for Group1.
C. Share Folder1. Assign User1 the Read and Change share permission.
D. Share Folder1. Assign Group1 the Read and Change share permission.
Answer: B
Q10. - (Topic 4)
A company has a deployment of Windows Deployment Services (WDS), the Microsoft Deployment Toolkit (MDT), and the Windows Automated Installation Kit (WAIK).
You are preparing to capture an image of a Windows 7 reference computer. You plan to deploy the image to new computers that have the same hardware as the reference computer.
You need to ensure that the captured image contains the device drivers from the reference computer.
What should you do?
A. Run the Dism command with the /Add-Driver option.
B. Run the Dism command with the /Mount-Wimoption.
C. Run the BCDEdit command.
D. Run the Start /w ocsetup command.
E. Run the ImageX command with the /Mount parameter.
F. Run the DiskPart command and the Attach command option.
G. Use Sysprep with an answer file and set the PersistAllDeviceInstalls option in the answer file to True.
H. Add a boot image in WDS.
I. Use Sysprep with an answer file and set the UpdateInstalledDrivers option in the answer file to Yes.
J. Use Sysprep with an answer file and set the PersistAllDeviceInstalls option in the answer file to False.
K. Create a capture image in WDS.
L. Run the Dism command with the /Add-Package option.
M. Use Sysprep with an answer file and set the UpdateInstalledDrivers option in the answer file to No.
N. Run the PEImq /Prep command.
Answer: G
Explanation:
Persisting Plug and Play Device Drivers During generalize You can persist device drivers when you run the sysprep command with the /generalize option by specifying the PersistAllDeviceInstallssetting in the Microsoft-Windows-PnPSysprep component. During the specialize configuration pass, Plug and Play scans the computer for devices and installs device drivers for the detected devices. By default, these device drivers are removed from the system when you generalize the system. If you set PersistAllDeviceInstalls to true in an answer file, Sysprep will not remove the detected device drivers. For more information, see the Unattended WindowsSetup Reference (Unattend.chm). http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd744512(WS.10).aspx