Chapter 4 Lesson 1 Flashcards

1
Q
1. Which of the following is not one of the primary tools desktop administrators typically use for the purpose of deploying configuration settings to a large number of workstations?
A. Group Policy Management Console 
B. Local Group Policy Editor
C. Logon/logoff scripts
D. Startup/shutdown scripts
A

B

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2
Q
  1. Which of the following are the primary differences between startup/shutdown scripts and logon/logoff scripts? (Choose all that apply.)
    A. Logon/logoff scripts run under the account with which the user logged on and are relatively limited in the types of tasks they can perform.
    B. Startup/shutdown scripts use the credentials of the computer object, have System privileges on the local computer, and can access the entire local file system and the registry.
    C. Logon/logoff scripts run under the account with which the user logged on, have System privileges on the local computer, and can access the entire local file system and the registry.
    D. Startup/shutdown scripts use the credentials of the computer object but are relatively limited in the types of tasks they can perform.
A

A and B

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3
Q
  1. Which of the following are languages that you can use to create startup/shutdown and logon/logoff scripts? (Choose all that apply.)
    A. Batch files
    B. Windows Script Host c. VBScript
    D. Windows PowerShell
A

A, C and D

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4
Q
  1. Which of the following statements about Group Policy processing speed is true?
    A. Foreground processing is faster than background processing.
    B. Monolithic GPOs always configure workstations faster than functional GPOs.
    C. How often you modify GPOs has no effect on the speed at which workstations process them.
    D. Asynchronous processing is faster than synchronous processing.
A

D

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5
Q
  1. Which of the following is not true of functional GPOs?
    A. Functional GPOs are numerous and contain relatively few settings.
    B. Functional GPOs are dedicated to a specific area or type of setting.
    C. Functional GPOs enable you to organize related settings into separate GPOs so that you can delegate responsibility for them to specific administrators.
    D. Functional GPOs contain all of the settings a workstation needs, including Computer Configuration and User Configuration settings, Policies and Preferences settings, and Administrative Templates settings.
A

D

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