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2021 Dec 70-689 books:

Q61. You are an administrator for a large company that has an Active Directory domain. Your company has tablets that run Windows RT. 

Users report that their tablets get locked after one minute of inactivity. They also report that when they change the Personalization setting to 15 minutes, it resets back to 1 minute. 

You need to ensure that the lockout time for inactivity is set to 15 minutes. 

What should you do? 

A. Modify ActiveSync configuration. 

B. Log on to the tablets as a local administrator and run the PowerShell cmdlet Set-ScreenSaverTimeout -Seconds 900. 

C. Log on to the tablets as a local administrator and configure the Screensaver wait time and logon options. 

D. Modify Group Policy. 

E. Configure the local system policy Do not display the lock screen setting to Enabled. 

Answer:

Explanation: 

Because it is Windows RT, option ‘C’ is the most logical answer as ActiveSync would beused to manage the device. Run ActiveSync cmdlet -MaxInactivityTimeDeviceLock: ****15 min or other time here****** It keeps changing because the activesync is overriding the personalization settings. Therefore, if you change the activesync to 15 min, it will override the inactivity lockout time to 15min. You can set a local group policy but chances are the activesync will override that also. There may be registry setting you can change but that isn’t an option to choose. SO it’s modify activesync config 


Q62. A company has client computers that run Windows 8. The client computers are connected to a corporate private network. 

Users are currently unable to connect from their home computers to their work computers by using Remote Desktop. 

You need to ensure that users can remotely connect to their office computers by using Remote Desktop, users must not be able to access any other corporate network resource from their home computers. 

Which setting should you configure on the home computers? 

A. Remote Desktop Gateway IP address 

B. DirectAccess connection 

C. Remote Desktop local resources 

D. Virtual Private Network connection 

Answer:

Explanation: 

http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc731435.aspx Remote Desktop Gateway allows a home computer to remote into the work computer. The Work computer can access corporate network resources, just as if the worker was at the workstation, but the HOME COMPUTER cannot access corporate resources. 

RD RAPs will enable us to control remote user access to internal network resources. With RD CAPs we can control which Users or Computers can connect via RDP. VPNprovides the HOME computer with an IP Address directly of the Corporate private network, giving the HOME computer access to the corporate private resources 


Q63. You deploy several tablet PCs that run Windows 8. 

You need to minimize power usage when the user presses the sleep button. 

What should you do? 

A. Disable the C-State control in the computer's BIOS. 

B. In Power Options, configure the sleep button setting to Sleep. 

C. In Power Options, configure the sleep button setting to Hibernate. 

D. Configure the active power plan to set the system cooling policy to passive. 

Answer:

Explanation: 

Sleep is a power-saving state that allows a computer to quickly resume full-power operation (typically within several seconds) when you want to start working again. Putting your computer into the sleep state is like pausing a DVD player—the computer immediately stops what it’s doing and is ready to start again when you want to resume working. 

Hibernation is a power-saving state designed primarily for laptops. While sleep puts your work and settings in memory and draws a small amount of power, hibernation puts your open documents and programs on your hard disk, and then turns off your computer. Of all the power-saving states in Windows, hibernation uses the least amount of power. On a laptop, use hibernation when you know that you won't use your laptop for an extended period and won't have an opportunity to charge the battery during that time. 

Hybrid sleep is designed primarily for desktop computers. Hybrid sleep is a combination of sleep and hibernate—it puts any open documents and programs in memory and on your hard disk, and then puts your computer into a low-power state so that you can quickly resume your work. That way, if a power failure occurs, Windows can restore your work from your hard disk. When hybrid sleep is turned on, putting your computer into sleep automatically puts your computer into hybrid sleep. Hybrid sleep is typically turned on by default on desktop computers. 

http://www.eightforums.com/tutorials/14956-power-button-action-change-windows-8-a.html 


Q64. You administer client computers that run Windows 8 Enterprise deployed by using Windows Deployment Services (WDS). Your company recently purchased 25 new tablets that run Windows 8 Pro. 

For all 25 new tablets, you want to replace the existing Windows 8 Pro installation with Windows 8 Enterprise. 

You need to deploy the Windows 8 Enterprise image to all 25 tablets simultaneously by using the existing WDS infrastructure. 

What should you do? 

A. Start the tablets from a USB flash drive with a customized Windows Preinstallation Environment (WinPE). 

B. Start the tablets normally. Map the Windows Image (WIM) file from a WDS network share. 

C. Start the tablets in Windows Recovery mode. 

D. Start the tablets from the Windows To Go workspace. 

Answer:

Explanation: 

To create a bootable UFD 

1. 

During a running Windows Vista operation system or a Windows PE session, insert your UFD device. 

2. 

At a command prompt, use Diskpart to format the device as FAT32 spanning the entire device, setting the partition to active. For example, 

diskpart select disk 1 clean create partition primary size=<size of device> select partition 1 active format fs=fat32 assign exit where the value of disk 1is equal to UFD. 

3. 

On your technician computer, copy all the contentin the \ISO directory to your UFD device. You can manually create the directory structure or use the xcopycommand to automatically build and copy the appropriate files from your technician computer to your UFD device. For example, xcopy c:\winpe_x86\iso\*.* /s /e /f f:\ where c is the letter of your technician computer hard disk and f is the letter of your UFD device. http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc709665(v=ws.10).aspx 


Q65. ... 

You have a portable computer that runs Windows 8. 

You are creating a backup plan. You have the following requirements: 

Automatically back up the files in your Documents folder every hour. Ensure that you can recover different versions of the backed-up files. Do not back up the Windows operating system files. 

You need to configure the computer to meet the requirements. 

Which two actions should you perform? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose two.) 

A. Create a volume mount point in your Documents folder. 

B. Connect an external hard drive to the computer. 

C. Schedule a task to create a restore point every hour. 

D. Create a recovery drive on drive C. 

E. Turn on File History. 

Answer: B,E 

Explanation: 

File History only backs up data in libraries, favorites, desktop, and contacts and must use a non-system drive for backup. 


Up to date 70-689 vce:

Q66. RAG DROP 

You administer computers that run Windows 8. 

The computers on your network are produced by various manufacturers and often require custom drivers. 

You need to design a recovery solution that allows the repair of any of the computers by using a Windows Recovery Environment (WinRE). 

In which order should you perform the actions? (To answer, move all actions from the list of actions to the answer area and arrange them in the correct order.) 

Answer: 


Q67. A company has an Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS) domain. All client computers run Windows 8. 

You need to minimize the amount of Trusted Platform Module (TPM) authorization information that is stored in the registry. 

What should you do? 

A. Create a Group Policy object (GPO) that disables the Configure the level of TPM owner authorization information available to operating system policy setting. 

B. Create a Group Policy object (GPO) that enables the Turn on TPM Local Encryption policy setting. 

C. Enable Platform Configuration Register indices (PCRs) 0, 2, 4, and 11 for the Configure TPM validation profile for native UEFI firmware configuration policy setting. 

D. Create a Group Policy object (GPO) that sets the Configure the level of TPM owner authorization information available to operating system policy setting to None. 

Answer:

Explanation: 

There are three TPM owner authentication settings that are managed by the Windows operating system. You can choose a value of Full, Delegate, or None. 

Full: This setting stores the full TPM owner authorization, the TPM administrative delegation blob, and the TPM user delegation blob in the local registry. With this setting, you can use the TPM without requiring remote or external storage of the TPM owner authorization value. This setting is appropriate for scenarios that do not require you to reset the TPM anti-hammering logic or change the TPM owner authorization value. Some TPMbased applications may require that this setting is changed before features that depend on the TPM antihammering logic can be used. 

Delegated: This setting stores only the TPM administrative delegation blob and the TPM user delegation blob in the local registry. This setting is appropriate for use with TPM-based applications that depend on the TPM antihammering logic. When you use this setting, we recommend using external or remote storage for the full TPM owner authorization value—for example, backing up the value in Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS). None: This setting provides compatibility with previous operating systems and applications. You can also use it Explanation: There are three TPM owner authentication settings that are managed by the Windows operating system. You can choose a value of Full, Delegate, or None. Full: This setting stores the full TPM owner authorization, the TPM administrative delegation blob, and the TPM user delegation blob in the local registry. With this setting, you can use the TPM without requiring remote or external storage of the TPM owner authorization value. This setting is appropriate for scenarios that do not require you to reset the TPM anti-hammering logic or change the TPM owner authorization value. Some TPMbased applications may require that this setting is changed before features that depend on the TPM antihammering logic can be used. 

Delegated: This setting stores only the TPM administrative delegation blob and the TPM user delegation blob in the local registry. This setting is appropriate for use with TPM-based applications that depend on the TPM antihammering logic. When you use this setting, we recommend using external or remote storage for the full TPM owner authorization value—for example, backing up the value in Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS). None: This setting provides compatibility with previous operating systems and applications. You can also use it 


Q68. A company has 100 client computers that run Windows XP 64-bit Edition. 

You are deploying new computers that run a 32-bit version of Windows 8. 

You need to transfer the contents of each user's Documents folder to the new computer by using the least amount of administrative effort. 

What should you do? 

A. Manually copy the folder content to a USB flash drive. Then paste the files to the new computer. 

B. Use the User State Migration Tool. 

C. Use Windows Easy Transfer. 

D. Back up the folders by running the NTBackup command. Then restore the backup to the new computer. 

Answer:

Explanation: 

-Use the User State Migration Tool 

(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_State_Migration_Tool) 

32-bit to 64-bit migrations are supported, but 64-bit to 32-bit are not. 

-Windows Easy Transfer (http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/document? 

docname=c03477022&cc=at&dlc=en&lc=en) 

cannot transfer files between a 64-bit version of Windows and a 32-bit version of Windows. 

Instead, files need to be transferred manually using external storage devices. 

-NTBackup (http://superuser.com/questions/541122/restoring-a-windows-xp-ntbackup-file-bkf-file-on-windows-8 or http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/windows-and-office/restore-a-windows-xp-backup-in-windows-8/)??? 

-Manually copy the folder content to a USB flash drive. (100 clients!!) 


Q69. You administer Windows 8.1 client computers in your company network. 

You receive a virtual hard disk (VHD) file that has Windows 8.1 Pro preinstalled, along with several business applications. You need to configure your client computer to start from either the VHD file or from your current operating system. 

Which three actions should you perform? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose three.) 

A. Import the contents of the system store from a file. 

B. Export the contents of the system store into a file. 

C. Attach the VHD file by using Disk Management. 

D. Make the VHD disk bootable. 

E. Create a new empty boot configuration data store. 

F. Create a new entry in the boot configuration data store. 

Answer: C,D,F 

Explanation: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/gg318049%28v=ws.10%29.aspx Creating Bootable Virtual Hard Disks Using the Disk Management Tools 

This section describes how to create a bootable VHD by using the Disk Management tools. You create a VHD and then apply a Windows image from a .wim file to a partition in the VHD. After you complete the steps in this section, you can configure the VHD for native boot or configure it to boot in a virtual machine by following the instructions in Preparing Virtual Hard Disks for Boot. 

http://blogs.technet.com/b/haroldwong/archive/2012/08/18/how-to-create-windows-8-vhd-for-boot-to-vhd-using-simple-easy-to-follow-steps.aspx 


Q70. A company has client computers that run Windows 8. 

You attempt to roll back a driver for a specific device on a client computer. The Roll Back 

Driver button is unavailable in Device Manager. 

You need to roll back the driver to the previous version. 

What should you do first? 

A. Disable driver signature enforcement. 

B. Run Device Manager as an administrator. 

C. In the local Group Policy, modify the device installation restrictions. 

D. In the system properties for hardware, modify the device installation settings. 

Answer:

Explanation: 

If there's no previous version of the driver installed for the selected device, the Roll Back Driver button will be unavailable even if you are logged on as an administrator.