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Q21. - (Topic 2)
You have a virtual hard disk (VHD) file.
You need to view the files in the VHD. The solution must prevent users that log on to What should you do?
A. From Disk Management, Attach VHD as read only.
B. From Disk Management, Convert the VHD to GPT disk.
C. From Windows Explorer, modify the permissions of the VHD file.
D. From Windows Explorer, modify the read-only attribute of the VHD file.
Answer: C
Q22. - (Topic 2)
You have a computer that runs windows 7.
You need to configure the monitor on the computer to turn off after 30 minutes of inactive.
What should you do?
A. From personalization, change the theme.
B. From display, change display settings.
C. From action center, change the Action Center settings.
D. From power options, change the current power plan settings.
Answer: D
Q23. - (Topic 6)
You have an answer file named Unattend.xml for a Windows 7 automated installation.
You need to perform an unattended installation of Windows 7 by using the answer file.
What should you do?
A. Name the answer file as unattend.xml and save it to a floppy disk. Start the computer from the Windows Preinstallation Environment (WinPE).
B. Name the answer file as unattend.xml and save it to a USB disk. Start the computer from the Windows Preinstallation Environment (WinPE).
C. Name the answer file as autounattend.xml and save it to a floppy disk. Start the computer from the Windows 7 DVD.
D. Name the answer file as autounattend.ini and save it to a floppy disk. Start the computer from the Windows 7 DVD.
Answer: C
Explanation: Unattended installation You can perform an unattended installation of Windows 7 by using an installation file called Unattend.xml. These installation files store answers to the questions asked by the Setup Wizard. When the Windows 7 installation process starts, Windows checks for attached USB storage devices that have this file in their root directory. Unattended installations are suitable when you need to deploy Windows 7 to a large number of computers because you do not have to interact with them manually, responding to prompts, as the installation progresses.Building a Reference Installation You configure your reference computer with a customized installation of Windows 7 that you then duplicate onto one or more destination computers. You can create a reference installation by using the Windows product DVD and (optionally) the answer file you created in the previous section. To install your reference computer using an answer file, perform the following procedure:
1. Turn on the reference computer. Insert the Windows 7 product DVD and the UFD containing the answer file (Autounattend.xml) that you created in the previous section. Note that the use of an answer file is optional, although it is the method Microsoft recommends. If you prefer, you can install Windows 7 manually from the installation DVD-ROM.
2. Restart the computer by pressing CTRL+ALT+DEL. You may have to override the boot order to boot from the CD/DVD-ROM disk. If so, select the appropriate function key to override the boot order during initial boot. Windows Setup (Setup.exe) starts automatically and searches the root directory of all removable media for an answer file called
Autounattend.xml.
3. After Setup finishes, you can validate that all customizations were applied. For example, if you included the optional Microsoft-Windows-IE-InternetExplorer feature and set the Home_Page setting in your answer file, you can verify these settings by opening Internet Explorer.
4. To prepare the reference computer for the user, you use the Sysprep utility with the /generalize option to remove hardware-specific information from the Windows installation and the /oobe option to configure the computer to boot to Windows Welcome upon the next restart.
Q24. - (Topic 5)
You use a desktop computer that has Windows 7 Ultimate SP1. The relevant portions of the computer configuration are shown in the following exhibits:
. The Disk Management console (Click the Exhibit button.)
. The System Properties window (Click the Exhibit button.)
. The System protection for Local Disk C window (Click the Exhibit button.)
You share the Pictures library over a network.
You discover that a JPEG image file located in the library was moved by a network user into a ZIP archive and is protected by using a password.
You need to open the image file.
What should you do?
A. Delete restore points.
B. Create a restore point.
C. Perform a system restore.
D. Search for the file in the Recycle Bin.
E. Increase disk space used for system protection.
F. Copy the file from a previous version of a folder.
G. Set restore settings to only restore previous versions of files.
H. Run the cipher /x command from the elevated command prompt,
I. Run the vssadmin list volumes command from the elevated command prompt.
J. Run the vssadmin list shadows command from the elevated command prompt,
K. Run the compact /U <file_name> command from the elevated command prompt.
Answer: F
Explanation:
Note: To restore a previous version of a file or folder that's included in a library, right-click the file or folder in the location where it's saved, rather than in the library. For example, to restore a previous version of a picture that's included in the Pictures library but is stored in the My Pictures folder, right-click the My Pictures folder, and then click Restore previous versions.
Q25. - (Topic 1)
You are installing Windows 7 on from the desktop of a Windows XP Professional PC. Which of the following can be performed from the Windows 7 DVD? Choose three.
A. Run setup.exe from the DVD to start the Windows 7 installation.
B. Use the autorun feature on the DVD to start the installation.
C. Perform a full installation of Windows 7.
D. Perform and upgrade of Windows 7 keeping all the Windows XP settings.
Answer: A,B,C
Q26. - (Topic 3)
You plan to deploy Windows 7 by using a virtual hard disk (VHD).
You need to ensure that when a computer starts from the VHD, the Windows 7 installation programs will run the out-of-box-experience (OOBE) portion of the setup.
What should you do?
A. Copy install.wim from the Windows 7 installation media to the VHD.
B. Use ImageX to apply install.wim from the Windows 7 installation media to the VHD.
C. Start the computer by using the Windows 7 installation media and then select Install now.
D. Start the computer by using the Windows Preinstallation Environment (Windows PE) and then run Diskprep.exe.
Answer: B
Explanation:
WIM images are file-based and can be installed on a VHD or placed on a network share for distribution. You can store several images in the same WIM file. Talks about Capturing the Installation onto a Network Share, but still applies. You can capture an image of your reference computer by using Windows PE and the ImageX tool. Then you store that image on a network share. Alternatively, on a computer running Windows 7 Enterprise or Ultimate edition, you can store the image on a VHD and make that VHD bootable. To capture the installation image you have created on your reference computer to a network share, perform the following procedure:
1. Insert your Windows PE media into your reference computer and restart the computer. As before, you may have to override the boot order to boot from the CD/DVD-ROM drive. If so, select the appropriate function key to override the boot order during initial boot.
2. Windows PE starts and opens a command-prompt window. Use the ImageX tool located on your Windows PE media to capture an image of your reference computer installation. For example, if your optical drive is drive E:, your installation is on drive C:, and you want to capture the image on drive D:, you would enter: e:\imagex.exe /capture C: d:\installationimage.wim "my Win7 Install" /compress fast /verify
3. Copy the image to a network location. For example, enter: net use y: \\network_share\images copy d:\myimage.wim y:
4. If necessary, provide network credentials for appropriate network access. Your image is now on volume Y:
Q27. - (Topic 3)
Your network contains computers that run either Windows Vista (x86) or Windows 7 (x86). All computers are joined to a domain.
You install a computer named Computer1 that runs Windows 7 (64-bit). You share a printer named Printer1 on Computer1.
You need to ensure that any user can automatically download and install the drivers for Printer1.
What should you do from Printer Properties?
A. Install a new driver.
B. Enable bidirectional support.
C. Modify the Additional Drivers settings.
D. Assign the Manage this printer permission to the Domain Users group.
Answer: C
Explanation:
If you are going to be sharing a printer with computers running previous versions of Microsoft Windows, you can add the drivers for the printer using Additional Drivers. When you add additional drivers, other computers on the network that do not have the printer drivers installed are able to download them from the computer that is sharing the printer.
Q28. - (Topic 6)
A user has a new 3TB External USB hard disk. The user plugs it into a Windows 7 desktop and sets it up, but it only shows 2TB of space. Additionally, disk management shows 2TB of space on the disk.
You need to make the full 3TB of space usable to the user.
What should you do?
A. Reformat the disk as an MBR disk.
B. Reformat the disk as a GPT disk.
C. Create a second partition and set it up to use the missing 1TB.
D. Convert the disk to a dynamic disk and expand the partition to 3TB.
Answer: C
Explanation: Ref: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd183729(v=WS.10).aspx
Q29. - (Topic 2)
You are investigating instability and boot problems on a computer running Windows 7 Enterprise. You boot using the Last Known Good Configuration (Advanced) option and perform a system restore. This does not solve your problems, and you want to undo the system restore. Can you do this, and what is the reason for your answer?
A. No. You can undo a system restore only if you initiate it from the System Recovery tools.
B. No. You can undo a system restore only if you carry it out after booting normally.
C. Yes. You can always undo a system restore, no matter how you booted the computer or how you initiated the restore.
D. Yes. You can undo a system restore that you perform after either booting normally or booting using Last Known Good Configuration (Advanced).
Answer: D
Q30. - (Topic 3)
You have a computer that has the following hardware configuration:
1.6-gigahertz (GHz) processor (64-bit).
8-GB RAM.
500-GB hard disk.
Graphics card that has 128-MB RAM.
You need to select an edition of Window 7 to meet the following requirements:
Support DirectAccess Support Windows XP Mode Use all of the installed memory
Support joining an Active Directory domain. Which edition should you choose?
A. Windows 7 Enterprise (64-bit)
B. Windows 7 Enterprise (x86)
C. Windows 7 Professional (64-bit)
D. Windows 7 Ultimate (x86)
Answer: A
Explanation:
The only applicable solution is Windows 7 Enterprise (64-bit) as for the following reasons:All versions are support Hardware wise.Requirements: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 memory
XP Mode Windows XP Mode is a downloadable compatibility option that is available for the Professional, Enterprise, and Ultimate editions of Windows 7. Windows XP Mode uses the latest version of Microsoft Virtual PC to allow you to run an installation of Windows XP virtually under Windows 7.
Use all of the installed memory The x86 version supports a maximum of 4 GB of RAM, whereas the x64 version supports a maximum of 8 GB of RAM.
Windows 7 ProfessionalWindows 7 Professional is available from retailers and on new computers installed by manufacturers. It supports all the features available in Windows Home Premium, but you can join computers with this operating system installed to a domain. It supports EFS and Remote Desktop Host but does not support enterprise features such as AppLocker, DirectAccess, BitLocker, and BranchCache.Windows 7 Enterprise and Ultimate Editions The Windows 7 Enterprise and Ultimate editions are identical except for the fact that Windows 7 Enterprise is available only to Microsoft's volume licensing customers, and Windows 7 Ultimate is available from retailers and on new computers installed by manufacturers. The Enterprise and Ultimate editions support all the features available in other Windows 7 editions but also support all the enterprise features such as EFS, Remote Desktop Host, AppLocker, DirectAccess, BitLocker, BranchCache, and Boot from VHD.