Question ID 11262 | You are responsible for desktop deployments for your organization. Part of your job is to develop
new ways of automating the deployment of Windows XP Professional to new computers and preexisting
computers being uABCraded. Your current project requires you to create different ways
for your local and field staff to quickly deploy Windows XP. To do this, you prepare a computer
with Windows XP Professional installed and configure it the way the computers settings are
required for computers used within the main office. For these systems, you run the Sysprep utility
to prepare the systems so you can create an image file for later use. After you distribute the image
to your local and field staff, two different problems occur. When the local staff try to use the image
file created with Sysprep, instead of running through the Windows XP Professional installation
without prompting for information, the Windows Welcome screen appears requiring the staff to
enter additional setup information. Because your local staff will be deploying this image on a wide
array of computers, you want to ensure that this image works without any interaction by the end
user. The other problem is that the field staff report that the Sysprep image is too restrictive to
what they need configured. They need to create new configurations more often and need to do it
quickly without rebuilding an image each time.
What should you do to rectify these two different problems? Choose two. Each correct answer
represents part of the solution.
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Option A | For the local site, use Setup Manager to create a Sysprep answer file. Copy the answer file to
a floppy disk, and insert the disk into new computers when the disk image is applied.
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Option B | For the field sites, create an Unattend.txt answer file. Copy the file to the C:\\Winnt\\System32
folder on the test computer. Run the Sysprep utility and re-create the disk image using third-party
software.
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Option C | On the computer you used to run Sysprep, rerun the Sysprep command with the -factory
switch. Once complete, re-create the disk image using your imaging software.
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Option D | For the field sites, create an Unattend.txt answer file. Copy the file to a floppy disk. Instruct the
field staff to run the Winnt32.exe setup program using the winnt[32]/u:answer file /s:install source
command line. Instruct them to edit the Unattend.txt file to make the changes they need to make.
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Option E | For the field sites, create an Unattend.txt answer file. Copy the file and the image file created
using Sysprep to a RIS server. Have the field staff boot to the RIS server to install the Sysprep
image using the Unattend.txt answer file.
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Option F | Have the local staff use a RIS server to apply the disk image to the computers at the local site.
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Correct Answer | A,D |
Question ID 11263 | You are the desktop administrator for a mid-size accounting firm. Management has recently
drafted new user guidelines that require a standard user profile to be created for all domain user
accounts. In addition, domain users must be prevented from making permanent changes to this
standard profile. After some planning and research, you create a standard company wide user
profile and distribute it to all users. After a short while, you receive reports from some users saying that the changes they have made to their desktop configuration and settings have overwritten the
profile settings you created in the standard profile.
What two steps do you need to undertake in order to ensure that the standard profile is protected
and that users cannot make permanent changes? Choose two. Each answer represents part of
the solution.
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Option A | Create a standard desktop and user configuration and copy the User.dat file from the folder to
your network server.
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Option B | Open Control Panel. In System properties, copy the standard user profile folder to the profile
server. Grant the Everyone group the "Allow-Full Control" permission on the copied profile. Name
the directory that contains the standard user profile Standard.man.
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Option C | Open the local default user profile. Rename Ntuser.dat to Ntuser.man.
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Option D | Remove the permission to View Folder Contents on all directories that hold the roaming profile
for all users in the domain.
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Option E | Open Control Panel. In System properties, copy the mandatory user profile to the profile
server. Grant the Everyone group the Allow-Full Control permission on the copied profile. Change
the profile type from Local to Roaming.
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Option F | Open Control Panel. In System properties, copy a preconfigured User.dat file to the profile
server.
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Correct Answer | C,E |