QUESTION 271
You administer client computers that have Windows 7 Enterprise installed for the marketing department of your company. The client computers are members of a single Active Directory domain. All regular client computer user accounts are members of the domain security group named Marketing.
You install a new printer on one of the client computers. You remove the Everyone group from the access control list (ACL) for the printer, and then share the printer.
You need to achieve the following goals:
– Prevent members of the Marketing group from modifying the print jobs of
other users.
– Ensure that members of the Marketing group can modify the print jobs that
they submit.
What should you do?

A.    Modify local Group Policy on the desktops and disable the Point and Print Restrictions user right to the
Marketing group.
B.    Modify local Group Policy on the desktops and assign the Take ownership of files or other objects user
right to the Marketing group.
C.    From the printer properties, assign the Manage Documents permission to the Marketing group.
D.    From the printer properties, assign the Print permission to the Marketing group.

Answer: D

QUESTION 272
You are performing a native VHD boot from Windows Vista to Windows 7 Professional. Window 7 Professional is installed on F:\Windows7Pro.vhd.
You run the bcdedit /copy {current} /d "Windows 7 VDH" command. The boot configuration data is enumerated as shown in the exhibit. (Click the Exhibit button.)
You need to ensure that the following requirements are met:
– Both operating systems are bootable after the Power On Self-Test (POST).
– Windows 7 VHD is selected as the default boot entry.
Which three commands should you run? (Each correct answer presents a part of the solution. Choose three.)

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A.    Bcdedit /default {ded5a252-7077-11e0-8ac8-a2d217dce703}
B.    Bcdedit /set {ded5a24e-7077-11e0-8ac8-a2d217dce703} osdevice vhd=[f:]\Windows7Pro.vhd
C.    Bcdboot C:\windows /s E:
D.    Bcdedit /set {ded5a24e-7077-11e0-8ac8-a2d217dce703} device vhd=[f:]\Windows7Pro.vhd
E.    Bcdedit /set {ded5a252-7077-11e0-8ac8-a2d217dce703} device vhd=[f:]\Windows7Pro.vhd
F.    Bcdedit /default {current}
G.    Bcdedit /set {ded5a252-7077-11e0-8ac8-a2d217dce703} osdevice vhd=[f:]\Windows7Pro.vhd

Answer: AEG

QUESTION 273
Your company network includes desktop computers that have Windows XP Professional SP1 64-bit installed.
The company has purchased new portable computers that have Windows 7 Professional 32-bit installed.
You need to be able to migrate user profiles from the desktop computers to the portable computers.
What should you do?

A.    Stop the User Profile Service on the desktop computers.
B.    Replace all versions of Windows 7 with 64-bit.
C.    Add each desktop user to the local Administrators on the desktop computers.
D.    Run scanstate /nocompress on the desktop computers.

Answer: B

QUESTION 274
You use a portable computer that has Windows 7 Enterprise SP1 installed.
A conference room at your company has a network projector installed on a server within the company network. You need to connect to the projector from your computer. What should you do?

A.    From PowerShell, run the Net Config command.
B.    From Display, click Connect to a projector.
C.    From Accessories, click Connect to a Network Projector.
D.    Run the Displayswitch.exe command and select Projector only.

Answer: C

QUESTION 275
You use a computer that has Windows 7 and Internet Explorer 8 installed.
You need to block all web content providers on the Internet from collecting and sharing your information with other websites. What should you do?

A.    Enable InPrivate Filtering and select Automatically Block.
B.    From Internet Options, configure Privacy Settings for third-party cookies.
C.    Start an InPrivate Browsing session.
D.    From Manage Add-ons, disable all ActiveX and Java extensions.
E.    From Internet Options, add the web content provider to Restricted Sites.

Answer: A

QUESTION 276
You administer an Active Directory domain that includes portable computers that have Windows 7 SP1 installed. You log on to one of the portable computers by using a domain user account and install a new device for a bar-code scanner.
You restart the portable computer after installing the new device driver. You successfully log on to the computer by using a domain user account. After logging on, you discover that the bar-code scanner is not working due to a driver error. You try to remove the installed driver, but the Roll Back Driver option is unavailable. You need to be able to roll back the driver to its previous version. What should you do?

A.    From the Local Group Policy, modify Device Installation Restrictions.
B.    Run the Device Manager by using elevated permissions.
C.    Start the portable computer from the Windows 7 installation media and select Startup Repair.
D.    Start the computer and select Last Known Good Configuration from the advanced startup options.

Answer: B

QUESTION 277
Note: This QUESTION is part of a series of QUESTIONs that use the same set of answer choices. Ananswer choice may be correct for more than one QUESTION in the series.
Your company office Network includes a file server that has Windows Server 2008 R2 installed and client computers that have Windows 7 Enterprise installed.
The computers are members of an Active Directory domain. The file server has the BranchCache feature installed. All sales users in the office must download a daily updated 5 GB file that is stored on a file server located in a remote office.
You configure the client computers to run BranchCache in Distributed Cache mode. You discover that all users still access the file directly from the file server.
You need to reduce the utilization of a WAN link between the offices because of downloading the file to the client computers.
What should you do?

A.    Run the Netsh branchcache set service mode=HOSTEDCLIENT command.
B.    Configure firewall exception rules for multicast traffic, inbound and outbound traffic for local UDP port 3702,
and inbound and outbound traffic for local TCP port 80.
C.    Configure firewall exception rules for inbound and outbound traffic for local TCP port 80 and for inbound and
outbound traffic for local TCP port 8443.
D.    Run the Netsh branchcache set service mode=DISTRIBUTED command.
E.    Check permissions.
F.    Create a Group Policy object and enable the Set BranchCache Hosted Cache mode policy.
G.    Create a Group Policy that sets Hash Publication for BranchCache as disabled.
H.    Create a Group policy object and configure the Set percentage of disk space used for client computer cache
option.
I.    Run the Netsh branchcache set service mode=HOSTEDSERVER clientauthentication=NONE command.

Answer: F
Explanation:
Original wording: You configure the client computers to run BranchCache in ‘Distributed Host Mode’. Changed to ‘Distributed Cache mode".

QUESTION 278
Your network consists of an Active Directory domain and a DirectAccess infrastructure. You install Windows 7 on a new portable computer and join the computer to the domain. You need to ensure that the computer can establish DirectAccess connections. What should you do?

A.    Install a computer certificate.
B.    Create a new network connection.
C.    Enable the Network Discovery firewall exception.
D.    Add the computer account to the Network Configuration Operators group.

Answer: A
Explanation:
Certificates
The DirectAccess IPsec session is established when the client running Windows 7 and the DirectAccess server authenticate with each other using computer certificates. DirectAccess supports only certificate-based authentication.DirectAccess Client Configuration Clients receive their DirectAccess configuration through Group Policy. This differs from traditional VPN configuration where connections are configured manually or distributed through the connection manager administration kit. Once you have added the computer’s client account to the designated security group, you need to install a computer certificate on the client for the purpose of DirectAccess authentication. An organization needs to deploy Active Directory Certificate Services so that clients can automatically enroll with the appropriate certificates.

QUESTION 279
You have a portable computer named Computer1 that runs Windows 7.
You have a file server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2008. Server1 contains a shared folder named Share1.
You need to configure Computer1 to meet the following requirements:
– Ensure that cached files from Share1 are encrypted.
– Ensure that files located in Share1 are available when Server1 is
disconnected from the network.
What should you do?

A.    On Server1, encrypt the files in Share1. On Computer1, make Share1 available offline.
B.    On Server1, configure BitLocker Drive Encryption. On Computer1, make Share1 available offline.
C.    On Computer1, make Share1 available offline and enable encryption of offline files.
D.    On Computer1, copy the files from Share1 to the Documents library and configure BitLocker Drive Encryption.

Answer: C
Explanation:
Offline FilesThe Offline Files feature of Windows 7 allows a client to locally cache files hosted in shared folders so that they are accessible when the computer is unable to connect directly to the network resource. The Offline Files feature is available to users of the Professional, Enterprise, and Ultimate editions of Windows 7. You can use the Offline Files feature to ensure access when a client computer is out of the office or when a temporary disruption, such as a wide area network (WAN) link failing between a branch office and a head office, blocks access to specially configured shared folders.
Using Sync CenterYou can use Sync Center to synchronize files, manage offline files, and resolve synchronization conflicts manually. Sync Center is located within the Control Panel or by typing Sync Center into the Search Programs and Files text box on the Start menu. Clicking Manage Offline Files opens the Offline Files. This dialog box is also available using the Offline Files control panel. Using this dialog box, you can disable offline files, view offline files, configure disk usage for offline files, configure encryption for offline files, and configure how often Windows 7 should check for slow network conditions.

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QUESTION 280
You have a computer named Computer1 that runs Windows Vista and a computer named Computer2 that runs Windows 7. You plan to migrate all profiles and user files from Computer1 to Computer2. You need to identify how much space is required to complete the migration. What should you do?

A.    On Computer1 run Loadstate c:\store /nocompress.
B.    On Computer1 run Scanstate c:\store /nocompress /p.
C.    On Computer2 run Loadstate \\computer1\store /nocompress.
D.    On Computer2 run Scanstate \\computer1\store /nocompress /p.

Answer: B
Explanation:
ScanState
You run ScanState on the source computer during the migration. You must run ScanState.exe on computers running Windows Vista and Windows 7 from an administrative command prompt. When running ScanState on a source computer that has Windows XP installed, you need to run it as a user that is a member of the local administrators group. The following command creates an encrypted store named Mystore on the file share named Migration on the file server named Fileserver that uses the encryption key Mykey: scanstate \\fileserver\migration\mystore /i:migapp.xml /i:miguser.xml /o /config:config.xml /encrypt /key:"mykey" Space Estimations for the Migration StoreWhen the ScanState command runs, it will create an .xml file in the path specified. This .xml file includes improved space estimations for the migration store. The following example shows how to create this .xml file: Scanstate.exe C:\MigrationLocation [additional parameters]
/p:"C:\MigrationStoreSize.xml" To preserve the functionality of existing applications or scripts that require the previous behavior of USMT, you can use the /p option, without specifying "pathtoafile", in USMT 4.0. If you specify only the /p option, the storage space estimations are created in the same manner as with USMT 3.x releases. User State Migration ToolUSMT 4.0 is a command-line utility that allows you to automate the process of user profile migration. The USMT is part of the Windows Automated Installation Kit (WAIK) and is a better tool for performing a large number of profile migrations than Windows Easy Transfer. The USMT can write data to a removable USB storage device or a network share but cannot perform a direct side-by-side migration over the network from the source to the destination computer. The USMT does not support user profile migration using the Windows Easy Transfer cable. USMT migration occurs in two phases, exporting profile data from the source computer using ScanState and importing profile data on the destination computer using LoadState.

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