Subject: 70-68 exam braindump

Hi,

 

Pass my NT 4.0 enterprise exam yesterday with 901 points.

I think it's one of the toughest exam I've taken till now

(win95, Network Ess, NT 4.0 core, NT 4.0 enterprise) They can

just ask everything ! But as mentioned by many others

trusts is the keyword. I got about 12 scenario questions

about trusts, two scenario questions about RAS (hardware

encrypting between modem and RAS server), 2 audit questions,

about 5 group strategy questions, 5 qeustions about permissions,

and the rest of the questions I forgot...

 

I used New Riders MCSE guide, braindump heaven and the

Transcender exams.

 

 

Here are some points to remember:

 

* When using a single master domain in a WAN and you

want certain remote sites to access resources on the master

domain you *HAVE* to put all the user accounts on the master

domain and place atleast one BDC at each remote site.

 

* When you assign NTFS permissions to somebody, share

permissions can cause 'access denied'. Remember 'No Access'

overrule all other permissions (NTFS + Share)

 

* The arrows always point at the account database (master)

 

* Read carefully if they talk about groups, they give an

answer which is appropriat for global groups but not for

local groups.

 

* Even if they give an exhibit of a trust relationship draw

it out on your notepad it makes you see things just more

clearly.

 

* Complete trust relationships are rare. (even in the MS exams)

 

* Make sure you know the 'give away' questions like Diskperf -y,

what's DHCP, what is manage documents permission etc etc...

 

* Excel can be used to create an overview of your collected

data but isn't a correct answer if they ask which tools can

be used to collect data. This is a dirty one because in some

books they tell you that Exel can be used to create an overview.

 

* Baselines are created by Performance Monitor and NOT by the

network monitor.

 

* Make sure how to recover from disk failures. (all worst cases)

 

* Know RAID inside out.

 

* Know group management.

 

 

Good luck.

Patrick