Q291. - (Topic 5) 

You use a computer that has Windows 7 Enterprise installed. 

You install Windows Vista Enterprise to a different partition. You discover that the computer boots to Windows Vista by default. 

You need to ensure that the computer boots to Windows 7 Enterprise by default. 

What should you do? 

A. On the Boot tab in the msconfig tool, highlight the Windows 7 boot entry and select the Set as default button. 

B. From an elevated command prompt in Windows Vista, run the bcdedit /default {current} command. 

C. On the Boot tab in the msconfig tool, highlight the Windows 7 boot entry and select the Advanced options button. 

D. From an elevated command prompt in Windows Vista, run the bcdedit /default {default} command. 

Answer:


Q292. - (Topic 4) 

You have a computer that runs Windows 7. You have a system image of the computer. You need to restore a single file from the system image. You must achieve this goal in the 

minimum amount of time. What should you do first? 

A. Restart the computer and run System Restore. 

B. Restart the computer and run System Image Recovery. 

C. From Backup and Restore, select Restore my files. 

D. From Disk Management, select Attach VHD. 

Answer:


Q293. - (Topic 1) 

All the games including Titan Chess come with which versions of Windows 7? Choose two. 

A. Windows Home Edition 

B. Windows Professional Edition 

C. Windows Ultimate Edition 

D. Windows Enterprise Edition 

Answer: C,D 


Q294. - (Topic 1) 

You have a computer that runs Windows 7. 

You update the driver for the computer's video card and the computer becomes unresponsive. 

You need recover the computer in the minimum amount of time. 

What should you do? 

A. Restart in safe mode and then roll back the video card driver. 

B. Restart in safe mode and then revert the computer to a previous restore point. 

C. Start the computer from the Windows 7 installation media. Select Repair your computer and then select System Restore. 

D. Start the computer from the Windows 7 installation media. Select Repair your computer and then select System Image Recovery. 

Answer:

Explanation: 

If you install a driver that causes your computer to become unstable, you should first attempt to roll back the driver. If this does not solve the problem, you can restore system files and settings by performing a system restore to restore the computer to its last system restore point. A system restore returns a computer system to a selected restore point. System restores do not alter user files. Note that a system restore is not the same as a System Image restore. 


Q295. - (Topic 1) 

You have a computer that runs Windows 7. You create a HomeGroup. You need to secure the HomeGroup to meet the following requirements: 

. Allow access to the HomeGroup when you are connected to private networks 

. Block access to the HomeGroup when you are connected to public networks 

What should you do? 

A. From Network and Sharing Center, modify the advanced sharing settings. 

B. From the HomeGroup settings in Control Panel, modify the advanced sharing settings. 

C. Configure the HomeGroup exception in Windows Firewall to include Home or work (private) networks and block Public networks. 

D. Configure the File and Printer Sharing exception in Windows Firewall to include Home or work (private) networks and block Public networks. 

Answer:

Explanation: 

Windows Firewall does not allow you to create firewall rules for specific network locations on the basis of port address. Windows Firewall does not allow you to create rules that differentiate between the home and work network locations. You can only create rules that differentiate on the basis of home and work or public network locations. 

HomeGroup Connections This option decides how authentication works for connections to HomeGroup resources. If all computers in the HomeGroup have the same user name and passwords configured, you can set this option to allow Windows to manage HomeGroup connections. If different user accounts and passwords are present, you should configure the option to use user accounts and passwords to connect to other computers. This option is available only in the Home/Work network profile. 


Q296. - (Topic 4) 

A company has a deployment of Windows Deployment Services (WDS), the Microsoft Deployment Toolkit (MDT), and the Windows Automated Installation Kit (WAIK). 

You are preparing to capture an image of a Windows 7 reference computer. You plan to deploy the image to new computers that have the same hardware as the reference computer. 

You need to ensure that the captured image contains the device drivers from the reference computer. 

What should you do? 

A. Run the Dism command with the /Add-Driver option. 

B. Run the Dism command with the /Mount-Wimoption. 

C. Run the BCDEdit command. 

D. Run the Start /w ocsetup command. 

E. Run the ImageX command with the /Mount parameter. 

F. Run the DiskPart command and the Attach command option. 

G. Use Sysprep with an answer file and set the PersistAllDeviceInstalls option in the answer file to True. 

H. Add a boot image in WDS. 

I. Use Sysprep with an answer file and set the UpdateInstalledDrivers option in the answer file to Yes. 

J. Use Sysprep with an answer file and set the PersistAllDeviceInstalls option in the answer file to False. 

K. Create a capture image in WDS. 

L. Run the Dism command with the /Add-Package option. 

M. Use Sysprep with an answer file and set the UpdateInstalledDrivers option in the answer file to No. 

N. Run the PEImq /Prep command. 

Answer:

Explanation: 

Persisting Plug and Play Device Drivers During generalize You can persist device drivers when you run the sysprep command with the /generalize option by specifying the PersistAllDeviceInstallssetting in the Microsoft-Windows-PnPSysprep component. During the specialize configuration pass, Plug and Play scans the computer for devices and installs device drivers for the detected devices. By default, these device drivers are removed from the system when you generalize the system. If you set PersistAllDeviceInstalls to true in an answer file, Sysprep will not remove the detected device drivers. For more information, see the Unattended WindowsSetup Reference (Unattend.chm). http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd744512(WS.10).aspx 


Q297. - (Topic 5) 

You administer an Active Directory domain that includes portable computers that have Windows 7 SP1 installed. You tog on to one of the portable computers by using a domain user account and install a new device driver 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:


Q298. - (Topic 2) 

You have a portable computer named Computer1 and a desktop computer named Computer2. Both computers run windows 7. 

On computer2, you create a share named Share1 by using Advanced Sharing feature. 

You need to ensure that when you connect to Share1 from Computer1, the files that you open are automatically cached. 

What should you do? 

A. On Computer1, modify the Offline Files settings. 

B. On Computer1, modify the User Profile settings. 

C. On Computer2, modify the properties of Share1. 

D. On Computer2, modify the file sharing connection settings for the HomeGroup 

Answer:

Explanation: 

The caching feature of Shared Folders ensures that users have access to shared files even when they are working offline without access to the network. You can also use Shared Folders or Share and Storage Management to enable BranchCache on shared resources. The BranchCache feature in Windows. 7 or Windows Server 2008 R2 enables computers in a branch office to cache files downloaded from this shared folder, and then securely serve the files to other computers in the branch. To set caching options for a shared folder by using the Windows interface 1. Open Computer Management.2. If the User Account Control dialog box appears, confirm that the action it displays is what you want, and then click Yes.3. In the console tree, click System Tools, click Shared Folders, and then click Shares.4. In the results pane, right-click the shared folder, and then click Properties.5. On the General tab, click Offline Settings, configure the offline availability options as appropriate and then click OK. Offline availability optionsSelect the following offline availability option for each shared folder: All files and programs that users open from the share are automatically available offlineWhenever a user accesses the shared folder or volume and opens a file or program in it, that file or program will be automatically made available offline to that user. Files and programs that are automatically made available offline will remain in the Offline Files cache and synchronize with the version on the server until the cache is full or the user deletes the files. Files and programs that are not opened are not available offline. 


Q299. - (Topic 6) 

Your laptop has a 400 GB drive and currently reserves, by default, 2% (8 GB) for shadow copies. 

You need to reserve more space for previous versions of files. 

What should you do? 

A. From System Properties, System Protection, expand the Max Usage to 20 GB. 

B. From System Properties, System Protection, turn off system protection. 

C. From Disk Properties, change the Quota Settings from 8 GB to 20 GB. 

D. From an elevated command prompt, run vssadmin add shadowstorage /for=c: /on = c: /maxsize = 20gb. 

Answer:

Explanation: Control Panel->System and Security. >System [Properties]->System Protection->Configure 


Q300. - (Topic 3) 

You have a computer that runs Windows 7. The computer has a single volume. You install 15 applications and customize the environment. 

You complete the following actions: 

Create an export by using Windows Easy Transfer 

Create a system image by using Backup and Restore 

Install the User State Migration Tool (USMT) and run Scanstate 

The disk on the computer fails. You replace the disk. 

You need to restore the environment to the previous state. 

What should you do? 

A. Install Windows 7, install USMT, and then run Loadstate. 

B. Install Windows 7 and then import the Windows Easy Transfer package. 

C. Start the computer from a Windows Recovery Environment (Windows RE) disk and then run Bcdboot.exe. 

D. Start the computer from a Windows Recovery Environment (Windows RE) disk and then restore the system image. 

Answer:

Explanation: 

Restoring from a System Image Backup 

A System Image restore rewrites the entire contents of a system volume. Therefore, you restore from a System Image backup by booting from the Windows 7 Installation DVD-ROM and loading System Recovery tools or by pressing F8 during the boot process. Restoring from a System Image backup enables you to quickly get a computer running after you replace a failed hard disk, or if the operating system installation has been corrupted (for example, by malware that cannot be removed except 0 by wiping the disk). It is sometimes known as complete recovery or complete PC Restore. This procedure assumes that the System Recovery Options (otherwise known as the Windows Recovery Environment, or Windows RE) files are present on the DVD-ROM. If not, you can boot from the installation DVD-ROM and press F8 during the boot to access the Advanced Boot Options, as described in the next section of this lesson. To restore a System Image backup, perform the following steps: 

1. Ensure the backup medium is connected to your computer.2. Insert the Windows 7 DVD-ROM. Ensure that the computer BIOS is configured to boot from the DVD-ROM.3. Restart your computer. When prompted to boot from DVD-ROM, press any key.4. Windows 7 Setup loads. When prompted, select your regional preferences and then click Next.5. Click Repair Your Computer.6. In the System Recovery Options dialog box, click Restore Your Computer Using System Image. If thebackup was saved to a DVD-ROM, insert the DVD-ROM now. Click Next. The Windows System Image Restore Wizard starts.7. On the Select A System Image Backup page, the most recent backup is automatically selected. If this is the backup you want to restore, click Next. Otherwise, click Select A System Image, click Next, and then select the desired backup.8. On the Choose Additional Restore Options page, select the Format And Repartition Disks check box if you want to reformat the disk and overwrite all data, or if the disk is not formatted. If you do not want to overwrite all the data on your current disk, do not select this check box. Click Next.9. Click Finish. When prompted, click Yes to confirm. Windows System Image Restore reads the data from the backup and overwrites existing files. You can restore to a different-sized hard disk, provided that the hard disk is large enough to store the backup. After the restore is complete, the computer restarts using the restored system volume.