相关考题

多项选择题 You are the administrator of your company’s network. You network has five Windows 2000 server computers and 75 Windows 2000 Professional computers. The Windows 2000 Professional computers were installed by using a RIS image on one of the Windows 2000 Server computers.  You need to upgrade several applications on the Windows 2000 Professional computers. The applications do not have built-in support for scripted installations. You want to accomplish the following goals:   An unattended installation of the upgraded applications will be performed on the Windows 20000 Professional computers. Existing user environments will be maintained on the Windows 2000 Professional computers. The network name of each Windows 2000 Professional computer will be changed to match its asset tag. The RIS image and the upgraded applications will be enabled as they are added to the network. You take the following actions: Install the RIS image on a Windows 20000 Professional computer named Computer1. Install the upgraded applications on Computers1. Change the network name of Computer1 to %DMI-SERIAL_NUM%.  Run RIPrep.exe on Computer1 to load the RIS image on to the RIS server. Start all of the Windows 2000 Professional computers, and then load the RIS image from the RIS server.  Which result or results do these actions produce?()

单项选择题 You are the administrator of a small network supporting Windows NT 4.0 computers. You configure a setup script to automatically upgrade Windows NT Workstation 4.0 computers to Windows 2000 Professional. When you attempt to test the process on a single computer, you receive this error message:  "The specified Setup script file (path:\unattend.txt) is inaccessible or invalid.  Contact your system administrator."    Which action will most likely resolve this error? ()

单项选择题 As the administrator of your company’s network you are asked to upgrade several Windows NT 4.0 computers to Windows 2000 Professional. All user settings and application settings must be preserved.  Most applications currently running are compatible with Windows 2000 and all the Windows NT 4.0 computers meet the minimum hardware requirements. After you upgrade several computers to Windows 2000 Professional, you find that some applications did not upgrade properly.   What utilities and/or applications should be disabled (or removed) before upgrading?()